Paper applications are available in lieu of using the HealthCare.gov website at a health care enrolment fair co-sponsored by Planned Parenthood of Northern New England and the State Employees Association at Great Bay Community College in PortsmouthRepublicans opened a second entrance of their political struggle towards President Barack Obama's healthcare program on Tuesday, with a coordinated effort to persuade Americans not handiest that its major enrollment site is damaged however that private information is at risk of theft. In a Republican-sponsored listening to within the U.S. House of Representatives, three security experts said HealthCare.gov has security flaws that put person information in danger regardless of govt assurances. "There are precise, live vulnerabilities on the website now," David Kennedy, head of laptop safety consulting firm TrustedSec LLC, said in remarks before testifying on the topic "Is My Knowledge on HealthCare.gov Steady?" In a rapid "yes" or "no" query and resolution session, Republican Consultant Chris Collins of New York asked the consultants about the security of the website online: "Do any of you assume today that the website is secure?" The reply was a unanimous "no." "Would you suggest lately that this website online be shut down unless it’s?" Kennedy, Morgan Wright, CEO of Crowd Sourced Investigations and Fred Chang, cybersecurity chair at Southern Methodist College mentioned "yes." Avi Rubin, director of the Information Security Institute at Johns Hopkins College, mentioned he would need more information.