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Rogue router stumps San Francisco officials

Elinor Mills CNET News

Published: 12 Sep 2008 10:06 BST

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San Francisco officials are trying to find a device on the city's computer network that was allegedly left there by an IT worker who was jailed for refusing to divulge passwords to the city network, the IDG News Service reported on Thursday.

San Francisco network administrator Terry Childs was arrested in July on four felony charges of taking control of the city's computer network and locking administrators out. He remains in jail on $5m (£2.8m) bail despite giving up the passwords to the mayor in a secret jail cell meeting a week later.

The device, which appears to be a router providing remote access to the city's fiber Wide Area Network, was discovered on 28 August, the report says.

However, officials didn't know where the device was located and didn't have the user name and password to access it. When they tried to log in, a message was displayed that said the system was the "personal property of Terry S Childs", according to a screenshot officials filed with the court.

Credit: Report: SF officials looking for hidden network device from CNET News

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