A hacker who compromised phone systems for the US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) left the government with a $12,000 phone bill.
The hacker was able to compromise a voice mail system within the agency's offices in Maryland.

Five year-old flaw exploited to place 400 long-distance calls
vnunet.com, 22 Aug 2008
A hacker who compromised phone systems for the US Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) left the government with a $12,000 phone bill.
The hacker was able to compromise a voice mail system within the agency's offices in Maryland.
The compromised line was then used to place some 400 long-distance calls, according to reports.
A FEMA spokesperson told Associated Press that the calls were made to a number of countries in the Middle East and Asia, including India, Yemen, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia.
The hack was later discovered by Sprint, which then blocked outgoing calls from the number.
The security shortcoming was traced back to a known flaw in the voicemail system which had even sparked a bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security in 2003.
A fix for the hole has been available for several years, but the vulnerability was left open when a contractor installed an upgrade to the system.
FEMA said that the hole has since been fixed.

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