Virus causes Ministry of Defence outages

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The Ministry of Defence's administrative system has been infected with a virus, the MoD said on Friday. After a clean-up operation, some systems are still affected.

The administrative system is used by the army, navy and air force. Navy warships including the Ark Royal were affected, an MoD spokesperson said in a statement.

"We can confirm there is a computer virus affecting a small number of MoD systems; however, there is no impact on operations," the spokesperson said. "Immediate action has already been taken to clean up the infected systems and protect them from re-infection."

While the number of systems infected was limited, the whole MoD email system had been affected by outages, the spokesperson said. Internet access had also been affected. This was due to the MoD turning off parts of the system while they cleaned the infected machines, said the spokesperson.

The MoD was confident the infection was not somebody trying to infiltrate the MoD, said the spokesperson, who added that personal data had not been compromised.

The infection first occurred on 6 January, and meant some MoD staff were without network access. The MoD is investigating whether any payment systems were affected.

Earlier this week the secretary of state for defence admitted that only 27 percent of MoD IT systems fully meet government security guidelines.

Talkback

Th principle of Application Control is to only allow applications that are required to execute.

Also referred to as "whitelisting" - this control mechanism allows the IT manager to eliminate unknown or unwanted applications in their network, reducing the risk of malware and spyware.

So quite simply having application control in such an environment would quite simply not allow a virus to run.

lumension 16 January, 2009 21:43
Reply

Just a guess...

But I bet it's a GOOD guess.

Chris Rankin 17 January, 2009 00:05
Reply

... a timely reminder on why you must not deploy Windows in mission-critical environments.

conz 17 January, 2009 03:56
Reply

The software maker should be held responsible for their product. It is difficult for an IT department to keep up all the security holes in an MS based system, as they are usually under staffed, and over worked.

ator1940 19 January, 2009 13:52
Reply

This post has been removed by a moderator.

I am surprised that there is not some considerable degree of modular separation within the administration systems to virus scan communications between modules. Very, very simply put - if Google can virus scan my emails and attachments before I can open them, then why cannot a similar programme be inserted to protect the many unit modules within the service.

1000215420 19 January, 2009 19:11
Reply

Once something gets certified for MOD use it's virtually impossibly to get it de-listed, no matter how unbearably crap it is :(

Tezzer 19 January, 2009 19:56
Reply

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