Your IT Support Experts

We partner with many types of businesses in the area, and strive to eliminate IT issues before they cause expensive downtime, so you can continue to drive your business forward. Our dedicated staff loves seeing our clients succeed. Your success is our success, and as you grow, we grow.

Free Consultation

Interested in seeing what we can do for your business? Contact us to see how we can help you! Sign Up Today

  

USA Computer Services Blog

USA Computer Services has been serving small and medium sized businesses since 2012, providing IT Support such as technical helpdesk support, computer support and consulting.

What Can We Learn From the Library of Congress’ Recent Hack Attack?

What Can We Learn From the Library of Congress’ Recent Hack Attack?

Believe it or not, there’s more news in Washington D.C. than matters concerning the upcoming election--namely the fact that the Library of Congress was struck by a DoS (Denial of Service) attack in July, supporting the members of government in their calls for an apparently much-needed update to the Library’s systems.

While the average American is most likely more aware of the Library’s function of cataloging the written works of the world, it actually serves many more purposes. Congress naturally relies on it, but mainly for its intelligence resources and tracking of legislation. However, with the Library’s systems in their current unreliable state, those who critically need to collect information for their duties are forced to use a faulty infrastructure that might not deserve a user’s full trust.

Despite the Library being one of the first government institutions to utilize the Internet in 1996, chronic mismanagement since 2002 has had a negative effect upon the Library’s systems. Contractors were mishandled, budgets miscalculated, management failed frequently, and IT services became a mess.

Much of the blame has also been placed on one of the former librarians responsible for managing the library. During their 28 year tenure, there was an apparent resistance to the implementation of any new technologies--including the reigning librarian’s reported refusal to use email.

More recently, the Library has struggled to keep a CIO, only hiring a permanent employee after the Government Accountability Office (GAO) tore apart the Library’s IT in its 2015 report. Additionally, while the GAO estimates the Library to spend $120 million in its IT, their records of these transactions leave much to be desired. The Library also has failed to keep an accurate inventory of its assets, reporting less than 6,500 computers available when the true total is somewhere nearer to 18,000--almost three times the amount stated in the Library’s report.

The issues of the Library have even spread to separate government offices that just happen to be under its shadow. The copyright office, for example, is so pervasively paper-based that many records are still card-catalogued, and must still share the Library’s antiquated system.

IT providers can learn many lessons from the plight of the Library, first and foremost being that resistance to change--only because it’s change--is no way to manage any organization; be it a national institution or a small business. As evidenced by the Library’s struggles, dedication to the old way of doing things has a time and place, neither of which may be found in a forward-thinking establishment.

Furthermore, automation could have potentially prevented many of the Library’s woes, especially if implemented as part of a managed services strategy. By automating recordkeeping and keeping a regular schedule of IT improvements, the Library could have greatly reduced the issues they are facing today.

Today, the Library’s fate is looking considerably more positive, as Congress is pushing a bill to set term limits on a Librarian of Congress’s time to a decade, and the new Librarian--Carla Hayden--has a rich and successful history of library reform and technological implementation in some very difficult regions. With the former President of the American Library Association at the helm, the Library’s future is looking considerably brighter.

If your tech needs a Carla Hayden of its own, reach out to us at USA Computer Services. We have the solutions you need to fix your pain points and bring your technology forward, just like the Library of Congress is. Call us today at (704) 665-1619 for more information.

The Internet Has a Field Day When AOL’s CEO Gets H...
Tip of the Week: Adaptation is the Key to Cloud Mi...
 

Comments

No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment
Guest
Already Registered? Login Here
Guest
Friday, November 15, 2024

Captcha Image

Customer Login

Contact Us

Learn more about what USA Computer Services can do for your business.

Headquarters:
525 North Tryon St. #1600
Charlotte, NC 28202

Additional Location:
859 Willard St #400
Quincy, MA 02169
Additional Location:
60 State Street #700
Boston, MA 02129