DoD Common Access Cards vulnerable to new hack?

Randy Vanderhoof, the executive director of the Smart Card Alliance, joined In Depth with Francis Rose to talk about a potential cybersecurity vulnerability with...

The Defense Department’s Common Access Cards could be under attack.

Exploiting a previously unknown vulnerability in Adobe software, a new strain of malware attacks the “middleware” of smart card readers, according to SC Magazine, allowing potential hackers to swipe a card’s PIN number.

Randy Vanderhoof, the executive director of the Smart Card Alliance, told SC Magazine the vulnerability doesn’t specifically target DoD’s smart card but the software installed in scanners that actually “read” the card.

Vanderhoof, who said the vulnerability can be combated if that middleware is strengthened, joined In Depth with Francis Rose to discuss what DoD employees should be looking out for.

RELATED STORIES:

Government outpaces private sector in ‘smart’ identity cards

Agencies using HSPD-12 as ‘glorified ID cards’

This story is part of Federal News Radio’s daily Cybersecurity Update. For more cybersecurity news, click here.

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Getty Images/Elisank79U.S. Capitol

    Senate passes Social Security bill to repeal WEP and GPO

    Read more

    Some final thoughts from one of the leading reformers of Congress

    Read more
    Courtesy of: https://www.mfan.org/

    How children of military service members are at war

    Read more