Unlocked S3 Bucket Lets 36,077 Jail Files Escape
The leaky repository belongs to JailCore, a cloud management and compliance platform used in several states' correctional facilities.
Researchers found a misconfigured Amazon S3 bucket leaking sensitive data belonging to inmates of correctional facilities in Florida, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, and West Virginia. Investigators are working to determine the status of other potentially affected state jails.
The leaky repository, discovered by vpnMentor's research team on January 3, belongs to JailCore, a cloud-based management and compliance platform commonly used in US correctional facilities. It contained 36,077 records of sensitive inmate data including full names, mugshots, inmate IDs, booking numbers, activity logs, and a host of personal health information. The bucket was sealed by January 16, following disclosure to JailCore on January 5 and the Pentagon on January 15.
Data exposed in this incident includes medical records, which specify the drugs inmates are prescribed and taking during their incarceration. The bucket contained medicine names, dosages, and whether the patient accepted the drug. Full names of drug administrators and signatures of correctional officers were also compromised in the leak. While some state jails' inmate data is made publicly accessible; for example, current inmate rosters, medical data, and other personally identifiable information is not.
Read more details here.
Check out The Edge, Dark Reading's new section for features, threat data, and in-depth perspectives. Today's top story: "What Is a Privileged Access Workstation (PAW)?."
About the Author
You May Also Like
Transform Your Security Operations And Move Beyond Legacy SIEM
Nov 6, 2024Unleashing AI to Assess Cyber Security Risk
Nov 12, 2024Securing Tomorrow, Today: How to Navigate Zero Trust
Nov 13, 2024The State of Attack Surface Management (ASM), Featuring Forrester
Nov 15, 2024Applying the Principle of Least Privilege to the Cloud
Nov 18, 2024