Army contractor exposed 70,000 files, report says

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Cybernews said an Army contractor exposed more than 70,000 sensitive files before securing the directory.

Why this matters

The report raised concerns about how sensitive military-related data was stored and how quickly known vulnerabilities were addressed. The exposed files reportedly included base records, schematics, and personal information tied to military personnel and contractors.

More than 70,000 files that purportedly contained sensitive information on Army personnel and photos of military bases were exposed for months before being secured, according to Military.com and Cybernews.

Cybernews, a cybersecurity and technology news outlet, said it learned of the exposure March 16 after a security researcher reported an open directory containing U.S. military-related files. The researcher said he had notified the United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team, but the data had not been secured.

According to Cybernews, the exposed dataset included at least 70,000 files tied to U.S. military bases and other sites. The files reportedly included maintenance work orders, building schematics, personally identifiable information of military personnel, and personally identifiable information of contractors.

Cybernews traced the exposure to CMI Management, a U.S. government contractor that provides facility management services to the Army. Nazarovas said Cybernews attributed the leak to CMI based on contact information in the files and because the web server used a CMI-controlled Secure Sockets Layer certificate.

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