The SEC Says Its Filing System Got Hacked and the Data Possibly Used for Illegal Trades

NEW YORK — The Securities and Exchange Commission said Wednesday that a cyber breach of a filing system it uses may have provided the basis for some illegal trading in 2016. In a statement posted on the SEC’s website, Chairman Jay Clayton said a review of the agency’s cybersecurity risk profile determined that the previously detected “incident” was caused by “a software vulnerability” in its EDGAR filing system. The statement said the software was patched quickly after the hack was uncovered in 2016, although the possibility that some may have used it to make illegal profits was only discovered last month. The SEC revelation comes as Americans continue to grapple with the repercussions of a massive, months-long hack of Equifax, a credit reporting agency, which exposed highly sensitive personal information of 143 million people. The SEC chairman said this breach did not result in exposing personally identifiable information. The SEC files financial market disclosure documents through its EDGAR system, which processes over 1.7 million electronic filings in any given year according to the agency’s 4,000-word statement. Clayton’s statement also mentioned that a 2014 internal review was unable to locate some agency laptops that may have contained confidential information. The agency also discovered instances in which its personnel used private, unsecured email accounts to transmit confidential information. The SEC is continuin...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: Uncategorized cybersecurity onetime Source Type: news
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