Agency monitoring cyberattacks not staffed 24/7, report finds
By Tom Parry, CBC News
Oct 23, 2012
A new report from Canada’s auditor general says the federal government has made only limited progress toward improving cybersecurity and protecting the country’s critical infrastructure.
Michael Ferguson says in his report released Tuesday in Ottawa that his investigators found weaknesses in the mechanisms Ottawa has set up to counter a cyberattack.
Ferguson says progress was slowest between 2001 and 2009, when threats to vital government and private-sector computer networks were rapidly evolving. He says the situation has improved since 2010, when the government announced a cybersecurity strategy and a plan to protect critical infrastructure.
Still, Ferguson warns, Ottawa’s coverage is incomplete. He singles out the Canadian Cyber Incident Response Centre (CCIRC) for scrutiny. It was established in 2005 with a mandate to share information about cybersecurity and monitor more threats round the clock.
Ferguson says that never happened.
The centre today operates during business hours Monday to Friday, with a staff member on call after hours. The report notes the government plans to extend the centre’s hours and keep it open seven days a week. But Ferguson’s report questions whether that will be sufficient.
“As CCIRC is not operating around the clock, there is a risk that there will be a delay in the sharing of critical information linked to newly discovered vulnerabilities or active cyber events reported to CCIRC after operating hours.”
Auditor General Michael Ferguson looked at Canada’s response to cybersecurity threats among other topics in his annual fall report released Tuesday. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)The report also points out that while CCIRC is supposed to share information about cyber threats across federal government departments as well as with the provinces and the private sector, there have been breakdowns in communication. When auditors interviewed owners and operators of private-sector infrastructure, they found some had never heard of CCIRC.
The report also found that in one case when federal government computers came under attack by hackers, “the CCIRC was not notified by the affected departments until more than one week after the intrusion was discovered, contrary to procedure.”
And, it says, since CCIRC transferred responsibility for protecting government information systems to Communications Security Establishment Canada in 2011, CSEC has not been providing CCIRC with timely information about its findings.
Cybersecurity is just one of the areas the auditor general examined. Today’s seven-chapter report also takes the government to task for everything from its overly complex system of assisting injured veterans, to its reluctance to publish a long-term fiscal plan for the country’s finances. Among the findings:
On soldiers and veterans, Ferguson calls on Ottawa to improve the way it helps those who fall ill or suffer injury while serving their country. His report says more than 8,000 Forces members were released from the services between 2006 and 2011 because of health issues. According to the report, the government needs to do a better job helping these men and women.
“There are many support programs, benefits, and services in place to help ill and injured members of the military make the transition to civilian life,” Ferguson says.
“However, we found that understanding and accessing these supports is often complex, lengthy and challenging.”
In the final chapter of his report, Ferguson calls on Ottawa to be more open with Canadians about its long-term financial plan. He says the government has never followed through on its 2007 commitment to make public its analyses of the effects of government policy on the country’s finances.
Ferguson points out many OECD countries publish such analyses and challenges Ottawa to do the same.
“Analysis that provides a long-term budgetary perspective would help parliamentarians and Canadians better understand the fiscal challenges facing the federal government,” Ferguson says.
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