TIGTA: The IRS lacks secure Web servers

With unauthorized servers, the Internal Revenue Service risks having someone illicitly access taxpayer and personally identifiable information.

Unauthorized and insecure Web servers connect to the Internal Revenue Service’s network, which puts the agency’s computers and entire network at risk of unauthorized access to taxpayer and personally identifiable information, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration said in a recent report.The IRS has 1,811 unapproved internal Web servers on the network and 2,093 internal Web servers that have some security weaknesses, the TIGTA report, released Sept. 3, states.The IRS requires that business units register all internal Web sites and Web servers with the Modernization and Information Technology Services organization, but some fail to register their servers, the report states. The IRS might block unregistered servers from sharing information with the network.Because no office had responsibility for the Web registration program, the IRS has not enforced the requirement, allowing Web servers to connect to the network without proper authorization and accountability, the report states.“Malicious hackers or disgruntled employees could exploit the vulnerabilities on these Web servers to manipulate data on the server or use the servers as a launching point to attack other computers on the network,” said Michael Phillips, deputy IG for audit.The IRS also was using 33 different Web server software packages. Phillips said the agency should use as few products as possible to limit security risks.Among its recommendations, TIGTA urged the IRS’ chief information officer to:In response, IRS Chief Information Officer Arthur Gonzalez said the associate CIO for enterprise operations would be responsible for the Web registration program and database by Oct. 1. The IRS also will take steps to identify unauthorized Web servers and create policies and procedures to prohibit them from providing data via the IRS network by May 1, 2009. In addition, Gonzalez said the IRS will compare annual scans and disconnect noncompliant Web servers and perform quarterly security assessments of Web servers to measure compliance by Aug. 1, 2009.















  • Assign responsibility for overseeing the Web registration program to one division of the agency.



  • Enforce rules that ban unauthorized Web servers from sharing data with the agency’s network.



  • Require an annual scan of Web servers, compare the results with the Web registration database and immediately disconnect unauthorized servers from the IRS network.



  • Perform quarterly network scans of Web servers to measure compliance with security requirements.