Be careful where you put your laptop. An Ohio group learned that lesson the hard way after a laptop left next to a waste can was thrown out by cleaning personnel who assumed it was meant for trash. The laptop contained information on 1,309 patients. In a notice on their web site, Wright State Physicians…
Making Sense of Security Breach Cost Numbers
Larry Walsh writes: What is the most expensive security breach ever? Before you answer, read the rest of this blog (trust me, you’re probably wrong). According to a recent report by the Ponemon Institute, the mean corporate loss to IT security breaches last year was $3.8 million. During the four-week study period, participating companies reported…
Data breach demonstrates need for access control policies
Remember the breach reported a few weeks ago when a Freedom of Information request uncovered that a Canada Revenue Agency employee had been mining the database to identity high-wealth individuals that she might recruit as customers for her side business? The individuals whose data were accessed were never notified of the incident because the government…
CMSS Joins 'Red Flags Rule' Lawsuit Against FTC
What happens when you try to prevent ID theft by imposing new requirements on entities? Everyone wants out from under. Cheryl Clark reports on today’s installment of “Not me, please:” The Council of Medical Specialty Societies, which represents some 650,000 U.S. physician specialists in 34 societies, has announced its participation in a lawsuit to exempt…
Personal Information Of Some Tulsa Employees Revealed After Documents Left On Curb
Lori Fullbright reports: Documents containing names, social security numbers and salaries from employees of dozens of companies, including some in Tulsa, were left sitting on a curb in an Edmond, Oklahoma neighborhood. That was a couple years ago. A husband and wife saw the storage containers on the curb and decided to pick them up….
Virgin Media to inform customers of malware infections
Virgin Media has revealed that it will be sending customers whose computers are infected with malware warning letters. The company announced that it would be taking the step following research which found that nearly a quarter of its customers are affected by some form of malware including viruses, Trojans and spyware. Initially, Virgin Media is…