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4 dead as severe storms hit Houston, TX; Election Protection Program eases access to voting information; surge in solar installations eases energy costs for Missourians; IN makes a splash for Safe Boating Week.

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The Supreme Court rules funding for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is okay, election deniers hold key voting oversight positions in swing states, and North Carolina lawmakers vote to ban people from wearing masks in public.

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Hoosier Farmers Urged to Protect Against Hackers

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Thursday, April 21, 2016   

INDIANAPOLIS – Cyber attacks are reported in the news all the time, but you don't often think of the victims being farmers.

Still, it is a real threat and Larry Clinton, president of Internet Security Alliance, an information security think tank, says many of the agriculture industry's closely held secrets are vulnerable.

"There's valuable soil and content data,” he explains. “There's GMO variables. There's pesticide and chemical formulas, genetic engineering, innovative animal breeding techniques, planting, harvesting, processing, storing, transporting. There's a lot of important business data there."

Clinton says hackers can easily bypass firewalls, passwords and other typical ways of protecting data, and the agriculture industry lags behind when it comes to protecting itself.

Clinton adds it's not just big agribusiness at risk.

"Many smaller farms serve as feeders, essentially, up into the larger elements of the system, so sharing information and securing everybody is really what's necessary here," he points out.

Clinton says trade secrets are currently the most at risk, but cyber terrorists could one day go after data or even computer-controlled farm equipment in a way that jeopardizes the U.S. food supply.






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