Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Government The Media

Journalist Labeled 'Hacker' By Missouri's Governor Will Not Be Prosecuted (stltoday.com) 114

Remember when more than 100,000 Social Security numbers of Missouri teachers were revealed in the HTML code of a state web site? The St. Louis Post-Dispatch's reporter informed the state government and delayed publishings his findings until they'd fixed the hole — but the state's governor then demanded the reporter's prosecution, labelling him "a hacker." In the months that followed, throughout a probe — which for some reason was run by the state's Highway Patrol — the governor had continued to suggest that prosecution of that reporter was imminent.

But it's not. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports: A St. Louis Post-Dispatch journalist will not be charged after pointing out a weakness in a state computer database, the prosecuting attorney for Cole County said Friday. Prosecutor Locke Thompson issued a statement to television station KRCG Friday, saying he appreciated Gov. Mike Parson for forwarding his concerns but would not be filing charges....

Parson, who had suggested prosecution was imminent throughout the probe, issued a statement saying Thompson's office believed the decision "was properly addressed...." Post-Dispatch Publisher Ian Caso said in a statement Friday: "We are pleased the prosecutor recognized there was no legitimate basis for any charges against the St. Louis Post-Dispatch or our reporter. While an investigation of how the state allowed this information to be accessible was appropriate, the accusations against our reporter were unfounded and made to deflect embarrassment for the state's failures and for political purposes...."

There is no authorization required to examine public websites, but some researchers say overly broad hacking laws in many jurisdictions let embarrassed institutions lob hacking allegations against good Samaritans who try to flag vulnerabilities before they're exploited....

A political action committee supporting Parson ran an ad attacking the newspaper over the computer incident, saying the governor was "standing up to the fake news media."

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader UnknowingFool for submitting the story.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Journalist Labeled 'Hacker' By Missouri's Governor Will Not Be Prosecuted

Comments Filter:
  • Wait, really? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kelxin ( 3417093 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @09:42PM (#62263035)
    Now we have to worry about the highway patrol trying to push hacking charges on someone? The police are some of the LEAST educated in technology in the US, PERIOD. That's the reason they have their jobs. They are literally dumb grunts following orders that don't think for themselves or anyone else and entered the job in the first place because jocks and bullies only have three forward paths: sports, the military and police.
    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by JBeretta ( 7487512 )
      Wow. You sound like a bitter nerd.
    • Let me guess, atomic wedgies?
    • Re:Wait, really? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bev_tech_rob ( 313485 ) on Sunday February 13, 2022 @12:44AM (#62263193)

      I'm not defending the police in this matter, but most of this was bad blood between the governor and the newspaper that the reporter worked for if I have read some of the other articles about this issue correctly.

    • Re: (Score:2, Redundant)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      The police are some of the LEAST educated [...] in the US, PERIOD

      There, FTFY

      All it takes to become a cop in the USA is a couple years of community college in an academy where they are probably going to fill your head with lies like the idea that there is a "war on cops" when this is the safest time in history to be a cop in the USA.

      • Actually it doesn't even require that anymore. Most agencies are so desperate for cops that having the years of community college are preferred but not required.
    • Apparently they make better informed decisions than the governor. Or do you disagree?
      • Um, how about not wanting either a politician or a cop to be able to make life changing decisions for me.
        • Sounds like you need to get off this planet. There is no place of earth today where politicians or police don't make life changing decisions for you. Perhaps you can minimize government involvement by moving to some middle of nowhere, living off the land, with no government services whatsoever. Yea, I know, you will have to use money, which is government controlled (even if indirectly sometimes), but just spend it all so you can rid yourself of this government controlled instrument. It can be your last act
    • LoL! My comment went from a +2 to a -1 all the way up to a +5. This rating system is interesting!
  • by denzacar ( 181829 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @09:47PM (#62263039) Journal

    Another day, another exhibition. Enjoy it while you're here, you may not survive the next one.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Another day, another exhibition. Enjoy it while you're here, you may not survive the next one.

      Possibly. Dark times ahead and lots of morons cheering for those that will bring them.

  • the state needs to pay for expungement costs to remove this from the records

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 12, 2022 @10:33PM (#62263075)

    For abuse of office

    • What about the people who knowingly voted for him? Why do they get a free pass? At minimum, it is willful negligence.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        What about the people who knowingly voted for him? Why do they get a free pass? At minimum, it is willful negligence.

        Voters pay with blood for their mistakes. Eventually. Unfortunately the ones that lost pay too.

    • I hope there is at least a defamation and/or libel civil case coming against the governor. Even if not criminal, a large monetary award should serve as a great warning to other politicians.
  • Previous story... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bert64 ( 520050 ) <.moc.eeznerif.todhsals. .ta. .treb.> on Saturday February 12, 2022 @11:11PM (#62263109) Homepage

    Given the previous story about the government pushing for improved security, idiotic politicians like this one do need to be rooted out. Such behaviour is only going to scare away legitimate researchers and journalists, while actual malicious hackers will be based abroad and far out of the reach of local governors and the highway patrol.

    This guy is just an incompetent bumbling idiot, opening his mouth in public about something he has absolutely no understanding of. Even worse when such idiots are in prominent positions allowing them to cause undeserved harm and inconvenience to innocent people.

    • by danpro ( 9377429 )
      Or, he is just mean. He wants to get more votes from the uneducated. Think of DT, Desantis and the Co.
    • Apparently the voters wanted a bumbling idiot. Welcome to democracy.
      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        Often the voters only had two bumbling idiots to choose from...

        • Yea, even the Simpsons made fun of the "two party system" in the USA long ago. That said, theoretically if the voters really wanted to, they could elect a third party. Practically however, USA democracy's biggest fail is the people are uneducated, uninformed, and often misinformed, causing them to vote for one of two parties without any understanding of the real issues. This problem is further exacerbated by the ways parties end up clumping together to get votes for large collections of initiatives with an
  • He's at it again.
  • What? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by LeeLynx ( 6219816 ) on Saturday February 12, 2022 @11:57PM (#62263149)

    A political action committee supporting Parson ran an ad attacking the newspaper over the computer incident, saying the governor was "standing up to the fake news media."

    What does that even mean in this context? The database wasn't actually vulnerable? The reporter didn't actually access it? He was the one waving the ol' prosecution gun around over the reporter accessing it, if the news is fake then so is his accusation. Forget "this is why we can't have nice things", this is why we can't even have words mean anything anymore.

    • "We" can have words mean things. "They" cannot. Whichever side you're on -- and, alas, there are two sides, firmly entrenched -- there can be no words across the divide. Luckily, we're in an era where we fight with ballots not bullets, but this is a civil war at this point, and I have no idea how you negotiate a truce when language itself breaks down. I think one side or the other has to decide that losing is acceptable (worse than continuing to fight), which I think is impossible when the fight is existent

      • The fight isn't existential on both sides. Nobody is trying to stamp out white supremacists. If they want to only fuck other white supremacists nobody is going to stop them. The only thing of theirs under threat is their majority status which has helped them stomp on everyone else throughout history.

        • The white supremacists believe that it is existential -- that whites will be destroyed in revenge attacks and/or mixed breeding. It's the belief that matters, not the actuality, when it comes to figuring out whether they'll continue the language-equivalent of scorched earth tactics.

          • I think most of them fundamentally know that they are not actually under direct attack, and that they are the dangerous ones. However, I think they're using the belief that they are in much the same way as "save the planet". People ascribe a life and existence to the planet which is not warranted in order to galvanize themselves for action. But equally it's silly to be upset about people using that particular phrase when what they mean is "save the humans" or possibly "save the biosphere" (I prefer the latt

    • "Fake news" has pretty much always meant "facts I don't like".
  • What about the people who knowingly voted for him? How do they get a free pass? At minimum, it is willful negligence.

  • Reminded me of the infamous battle cry, "Who gave you permission to invade my website and block me and anyone else from accessing it???," "Please remove your software immediately before I report it to government officials!! I am the City Manager of Tuttle, Oklahoma." Source https://www.theregister.com/20... [theregister.com]. Wait, there is a difference. All that happened within days. But this guy is shouting for months now. May be he is not just an idiot, he is mean. Has a political vendetta? Note that the Tuttle man was
  • Data was being published that shouldn't have been.
  • ...as passwords by so many institutions & organisations? It's essentially a tax ID number & knowing what someone's SSN is shouldn't grant you any special privileges or access to confidential records. Fix this stupid bug in your system.
  • Because they are part of Missouri DPS.

    The Missouri State Highway Patrol Division is responsible for law enforcement on state highways and waterways, criminal investigations, criminal laboratory analysis, motor vehicle, and commercial vehicle inspections, boat inspections, and public education about safety issues.

    sorry, its slashdot

    ACAB or some other dumb hippie leftist bullshit.
  • by Baleet ( 4705757 ) on Sunday February 13, 2022 @08:31AM (#62263585)

    ...which for some reason was run by the state's Highway Patrol...

    The reason is that the Missouri Highway Patrol is a division of the state's Department of Public Safety and in addition to enforcing traffic laws on state roadways, acts as the statewide police agency.

    List of state police agencies in the United States [wikipedia.org], among which is the Missouri Highway Patrol and, in fact, a number of other agencies whose names contain the phrase "Highway Patrol". I think in the olden days, that phrase sounded friendlier than "State Police" which conjured up images of authoritarian dictatorships.

    Also in the olden days, before we killed the daily community newspaper, those small-town papers served the purpose of training people to do basic editing and newsgathering.

  • I suspect that reporting this, must have broken some republican voting fraud scam in the making, because of the aggressiveness of the attack on the reporter.

    Look for this same "flaw" in other red states too.
  • To be the governor, you just have to be most popular. You don't even have to be able to read or write (if you disagree, point me to any law that says governor must be literate). To be a police officer, you need some minimum training and education. The difference in this case shows clearly in decision making results.

It's hard to think of you as the end result of millions of years of evolution.

Working...