The story appears on

Page A7

August 22, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

US staff in sensitive jobs use cheating site

US government employees with sensitive jobs in national security or law enforcement were among hundreds of federal workers found to be using government networks to access and pay membership fees to the cheating website Ashley Madison, The Associated Press has learned.

The list includes at least two assistant US attorneys, an information technology administrator in the White House’s support staff, a Justice Department investigator, a division chief, and a government hacker and counterterrorism employee at the Homeland Security Department. Others visited from networks operated by the Pentagon.

Federal policies vary by agency as to whether employees could visit websites during work hours like Ashley Madison, which could be considered akin to a dating website. But such use raises questions about what personal business is acceptable — and what websites are OK to visit — for US workers on taxpayer time, especially those with sensitive jobs who could face blackmail.

Hackers this week released detailed records on millions of people registered with the website one month after the break-in at Ashley Madison’s parent company, Toronto-based Avid Life Media Inc. The website, whose slogan is, “Life is short. Have an affair,” is marketed to facilitate extramarital affairs.

Records also reveal subscribers signed up using state and municipal government networks nationwide, including those run by the New York Police Department, the nation’s largest. “If anything comes to our attention indicating improper use of an NYPD computer, we will look into it and take appropriate action,” said the NYPD’s top spokesman, Stephen Davis.

The AP is not naming the government subscribers it found because they are not elected officials or accused of a crime.

Defense Secretary Ash Carter confirmed on Thursday the Pentagon was looking into the list of people who used military e-mail addresses. Adultery can be a criminal offense under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

The AP’s review was the first to reveal that federal workers used their office systems to access the site, based on their Internet Protocol addresses linked with credit card transactions.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend