02-28-2010, 12:49 AM
Full Story: http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=9945663 Read the comments, too.
A classified review of the United States Secret Service's computer technology found that the agency's computers were fully operational only 60 percent of the time because of outdated systems and a reliance on a computer mainframe that dates to the 1980s, according to Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn.
A classified review of the United States Secret Service's computer technology found that the...
A classified review of the United States Secret Service's computer technology found that the agency's computers were fully operational only 60 percent of the time due to outdated systems and reliance on a computer mainframe system from the 1980s, according to Sen. Joseph Lieberman.
"We have here a premiere law enforcement organization in our country which is responsible for the security of the president and the vice president and other officials of our government, and they have to have better IT than they have," said Lieberman, who is chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee.
Sources tell ABC News that the Secret Service was so plagued by computer problems that the agency invited the National Security Agency to formally review its information technology systems. The Secret Service's databases are outdated and users are at times unable to conduct searches from one system to another.
A classified review of the United States Secret Service's computer technology found that the agency's computers were fully operational only 60 percent of the time because of outdated systems and a reliance on a computer mainframe that dates to the 1980s, according to Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn.
A classified review of the United States Secret Service's computer technology found that the...
A classified review of the United States Secret Service's computer technology found that the agency's computers were fully operational only 60 percent of the time due to outdated systems and reliance on a computer mainframe system from the 1980s, according to Sen. Joseph Lieberman.
"We have here a premiere law enforcement organization in our country which is responsible for the security of the president and the vice president and other officials of our government, and they have to have better IT than they have," said Lieberman, who is chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee.
Sources tell ABC News that the Secret Service was so plagued by computer problems that the agency invited the National Security Agency to formally review its information technology systems. The Secret Service's databases are outdated and users are at times unable to conduct searches from one system to another.