"The Devil Inside the Beltway." This chilling and personal story
that reveals, in detail, how the Federal Trade Commission
repeatedly bungled a critically important cybersecurity
investigation and betrayed the American public.
Michael J. Daugherty, author and CEO of LabMD in Atlanta,
uncovers and details an extraordinary government surveillance
program that compromised national security and invaded the privacy
of tens of millions of online users worldwide.
Background: The FTC, charged with protecting consumers from
unfairness and deception, was directed by Congress to investigate
software companies in an effort to stop a growing epidemic of file
leaks that exposed military, financial and medical data, and the
leaks didn't stop there. As a result of numerous missteps,
beginning by "working directly with" malware developers, such as
Limewire, instead of investigating them, the agency allowed
security leaks to continue for years. When summoned before
Congressional Oversight three times since 2003, the agency painted
a picture of improving security when in fact leaks were worsening.
Then, rather than focus on the real problem of stopping the
malware, the FTC diverted Congress' attention from the FTC's
failure to protect consumers by playing "get the horses back in the
barn." How? By attacking small business.
"The Devil Inside the Beltway" is riveting. It begins when an
aggressive cybersecurity company, with retired General Wesley Clark
on its advisory board, downloads the private health information of
thousands of LabMD's patients. The company, Tiversa, campaigns for
LabMD to hire them. After numerous failed attempts to procure
LabMD's business, Tiversa's lawyer informs LabMD that Tiversa will
be handing the downloaded file to the FTC. Within this page turner,
Daugherty unveils that Tiversa was already working with Dartmouth,
having received a significant portion of a $24,000,000 grant from
Homeland Security to monitor for files. The reason for the
investigation was this: Peer to peer software companies build back
doors into their technology that allows for illicit and unapproved
file sharing. When individual files are accessed, as in the case of
LabMD, proprietary information can be taken. Tiversa, as part of
its assignment, downloaded over 13 million files, many containing
financial, medical and top secret military data.
Daugherty's book exposes a systematic and alarming
investigation by one of the US Government's most important
agencies. The consequences of their actions will plague Americans
and their businesses for years.
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