Now Available:

line

Featured Resources:

line

Newsletter

Email Address:


line

Ask the Expert

Have a question for our resident expert? Email your questions to Rebecca.

« Info Sec and Privacy Pros Need Ongoing Training | Main | Court Ruling: ISPs in New Jersey Must Keep Personal Information Private »

Privacy Pitfalls

I had the opportunity to be the guest editor for the October Cutter IT Journal for an issue I called "Avoiding Privacy Pitfalls;" Cutter recently published notice of it.

It was great to put this together through the fantastic and greatly insightful as well as useful contributions of Dr. Andrew Jones, D.J. Vogel, Mark Fischer, David Lineman, Khaled El Emam, Roger CLarke and Timothy Virtue. They discussed privacy issues that organizations often overlook, ignore, or are completely oblivious about. For example, Dr. Andrew Jones describes his very interesting research into all the personally identifiable infromation (PII) on discarded equipment, and Roger Clarke discusses how to use privacy as a strategic factor within an organization.

There are many diverse, and often insidious, privacy pitfalls that will send organizations downstream to fines, penalties and litigation without a legal defense paddle. Organizations must consider what privacy incidents are possible and probable within their organizations. An excerpt from this issue:

"Herold highlights 10 security pitfalls to avoid:

Inappropriate access to the network or computer systems
Lost or stolen computers and computer storage media (backup tapes, hard drives, CDs, etc.)
E-mail messages with clear-text confidential information sent or forwarded inappropriately
Fraud activities perpetrated by outsiders, insiders, and combinations of both
Hackers gaining unauthorized access to personally identifiable information
Information exposed online because of inadequate controls
Insiders inappropriately using personally identifiable information
Confidential paper documents being given to people outside the organization (e.g., donated to schools/churches as scrap paper) instead of being shredded
Improper disposal of media containing personally identifiable information
Password compromise that allows access to personally identifiable information"


I have many more I could have listed, but space was limited...

Check it out and let me know what you think!

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.realtime-itcompliance.com/type/mt-tb.cgi/292

Post a comment

(All comments are approved by site leader before appearing here. Thanks for commenting!)

line

Rebecca Herold's Bio:

Rebecca Herold,CISSP, CIPP, CISM, CISA, FLMI, has been providing information security, privacy and regulatory assistance and services to organizations from a wide range of industries for over 18 years. Rebecca was instrumental in building the information security and privacy program while at Principal Financial Group, which was awarded the CSI Information Security Program of the Year Award in 1998. IT Security ranked Rebecca as one of the top 59 IT security influencers, and Computerworld put Rebecca their list of the 25 top privacy experts and on their list of the 9 best privacy consulting firms. Rebecca has been CPO for two consulting organizations, and has had her own information privacy, security and compliance business since 2004. Rebecca has written chapters for several books, dozens of articles, and has been writing a monthly privacy column for the CSI Alert newsletter since the beginning of 2001, and is working on her 11th book. Some of her other books include The Privacy Papers, Managing an Information Security and Privacy Awareness and Training Program, The Definitive Guide to Security Inside the Perimeter (Realtime Publishers), The Shortcut Guide to Improving IT Service Support through ITIL (Realtime Publishers), and The Practical Guide to HIPAA Privacy and Security Compliance. In addition, Rebecca is the leader of The Realtime IT Compliance Community where she posts to her IT Compliance weblog. You can contact Rebecca at: rebecca_herold@realtimepublishers.net.