Japanโ€™s space agency said March 27 that no classified or sensitive technical data were stolen from an employee computer infected with a virus last summer.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) disclosed in January that an employeeโ€™s infected computer had possibly leaked technical specifications and operations information on Japanโ€™s space station cargo ship, the H-2A Transfer Vehicle (HTV), along with email addresses and computer system log-in information.

A JAXA investigation of the security breach, which caused the infected computer to send out information sometime between July 6 and Aug. 11, 2011, found that log-in information, email addresses and other data stored on the computer leaked but these data did not include sensitive HTV specifications or operations-related information.

The employeeโ€™s compromised user IDs and passwords were โ€œimmediately changedโ€ when the breach was discovered last summer. โ€œWe also checked all the accessible systems including the NASA system, and found that no one other than the said employee accessed the system,โ€ JAXA said in a March 27 statement on its investigation results. โ€œTherefore, we concluded that there was no unauthorized access while the computer was infected.โ€

Meanwhile, a new virus sent to the same employee Jan. 6 reinfected the computer, whose virus protection software had not been kept up to date. โ€œWe have already taken countermeasures to prevent this in the future,โ€ JAXA said in the statement. โ€œWe take this incident very seriously, and would like to further strengthen our security measures.โ€

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