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« Penalty Applied for Laptop Theft: More Significant Penalties Are Needed to Motivate Better Safeguards | Main | Stolen Laptop: Cleartext Medical PII on 25,000 in Pennsylvania »

Stolen Laptop: 3rd Theft from Boeing Since November 2005; Clear Text PII of 382,000 On the Latest

It was reported December 15 that Boeing had the 3rd laptop stolen in just a little over a year.

The laptop was stolen from an employee's car. PII included "names, home addresses, phone numbers, Social Security numbers and dates of birth for current and former Boeing employees."

This latest theft contained cleartext personally identifiable information (PII) about 382,000 current and former employees. A Boeing laptop stolen in April contained PII about 3,600 individuals, and the one stolen in November 2005 contained cleartext PII about 161,000 individuals.

The good news...

* Policies exist requiring access to PII to be made only from network servers, and not to be placed upon endpoint computers, such as laptops.
* A project is underway to automatically encrypt files as they are downloaded from servers.
* Boeing is working to eliminate the use of Social Security numbers in all ways possible.
* Boeing is offering 3 years of credit monitoring to the impacted individuals.

The bad news...

* The PII of 546,600 could be in the hands of fraudsters, criminals and others with bad intent, and could be used months or years from the time it was stolen.
* The laptops stolen were not yet part of the encryption project.
* Employees will not follow policies if they are not well communicated, if there are no enforced sanctions, or if there are not tools in place to enforce them wherever possible.
* Employees will continue to do senseless things such as leaving laptops in cars where they are so often stolen. This human tendency makes it very important to have strong security controls in place, such as laptop disk encryption and the technology to prevent PII from being downloaded from the server repositories to begin with.

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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.