Leslie Tripp reports: Hundreds of pieces of mail fluttered onto interstates in eastern Missouri Sunday after the back door of a contractor’s semi carrying mail for the U.S. Postal Service popped open. The mail was scattered along 70 miles of highway near St. Louis, according to Postal Inspector Dan Taylor, who said the tractor-trailer was…
Audit: Md. computer network could be more secure
Max Smith reports: If you live or work in Maryland, your personal information; including tax forms, license applications and state payroll details, are on file in the Maryland Comptroller’s office, and an audit has found its systems should be more secure. The legislative audit found that software security and access controls were inadequate, with 84…
For Data Privacy Day on Jan. 28: Access Offers Free Information Destruction Services
I normally don’t post press releases, but because this one offers free services in support of Data Privacy Day and because I was I just talking about the need to securely destroy paper records, it gets the plug: Access Information Management, provider of records management, storage and destruction services for hardcopy and electronic records will host free…
For Data Privacy Day on Jan. 28: Access Offers Free Information Destruction Services
I normally don’t post press releases, but because this one offers free services in support of Data Privacy Day and because I was I just talking about the need to securely destroy paper records, it gets the plug: Access Information Management, provider of records management, storage and destruction services for hardcopy and electronic records will…
Is Florida failing to adequately protect its residents?
One of the recurring themes on my blogs is that we need a federal data protection statute that includes protection of paper records. Breaches involving paper records also need to be included in any federal data breach notification statute. Federal statutes are needed because too many states fail to address the security of paper…
FL: Healthcare Insurance Applications Found in Trash
Last month, I posted a breach story by Robert Siciliano about a then-unnamed insurance agency that had reportedly discarded Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance applications in a dumpster. The files were found by investigator William “Cobra” Staubs, who was engaged in “research.” Simon Barrett followed up on the incident and posted some pictures that suggest that…