Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Finance
Security
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

Missing Backup Tapes Spur Encryption at Time Warner

Data security boost follows loss of info on 600,000 employees
 

Sign up to receive Privacy Resource Alerts

May 9, 2005 (Computerworld) -- Time Warner Inc. last week said it will "quickly" begin encrypting all data saved to backup tapes, after 40 tapes with personal information on about 600,000 current and former employees were lost in transit to a storage facility.


The incident is among the biggest in a string of recent data-security mishaps that have also affected companies such as ChoicePoint Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Reed Elsevier Group PLC's LexisNexis Group unit.


A shipping container that held the 40 data tapes was lost on March 22, Time Warner spokeswoman Kathy McKiernan said. The tapes went missing during a routine shipment to an off-site facility by records management and storage firm Iron Mountain Inc. McKiernan wouldn't provide more details.


However, McKiernan did say Time Warner is trying to convince officials at Boston-based Iron Mountain to change some of their handling procedures. She declined to expand on the status of those discussions.


The $42 billion New York-based media giant also said it has provided the affected employees with resources to monitor their credit reports. The lost tapes didn't include data about Time Warner customers, the company said.


Larry Cockell, Time Warner's chief security officer, added that "we are working closely and aggressively with law enforcement and the outside data-storage firm to get to the bottom of this matter."


Iron Mountain said it has had four incidents of tapes going missing this year. In late April, Ameritrade Holding Corp. in Omaha lost a data tape with the names of 200,000 clients . At the time, the company wouldn't disclose how the tapes were lost, but in an interview last week, Ameritrade CIO Asiff Hirji said that the tape fell off a conveyer belt in a shipping facility.


Assuming the Worst


Hirji, who wouldn't identify the carrier, said that for "whatever reason," the shipper took "a bunch" of tapes out of its original secure box and placed them into another box. Sometime after that, the second box was damaged on the conveyer belt, and four tapes fell out.
"We found three," he said. "That other tape, I'm almost 100% sure, is somewhere in that facility—probably in the rubbish bin. Or it has been destroyed in their lost and found. However, we can't take that chance. We have to assume it's lost and has gotten into nefarious hands. I'm not pointing fingers. I'm not deflecting blame. It's our responsibility."
Like Time Warner, Ameritrade is taking steps to protect the confidentiality of clients whose names and/or Social Security numbers were on the lost tape. For example, the company has stepped up monitoring to detect whether any identities have been compromised. So far, Hirji said, there has been no evidence of compromised data.

Continued...
1 | 2 | NEXT  



Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
"Need help sorting through the hype of cloud computing? Here's some IDC research on the benefits, barriers -- and what..." Read more...
"Stephen Spoonamore offers more details on what I was trying to drive home in my recent column: Because individual votes..." Read more...
Read more Security posts or See all Blogs
IBM launches Bluehouse, a Facebook for business
iPhone grabs top smart phone spot
Oracle tries to step up on high-end databases
More top stories...
Microsoft scales out SQL Server 2008, wants to 'democratize BI'
Virtual Headaches
Filters on in-flight Wi-Fi may be just the start
Too much junk food, too little exercise and a 24/7 tether to technology? Your body ain't happy, friend. Let us count the pains.
Instruments on the surface of Mars have detected falling snow that is likely evaporating before it reaches the planet.
One positive development stemming from the collapse of Wall Street may be a boost in interest in computer science and IT careers among students who were previously interested in financial services jobs.
Getting new software installed on Linux doesn't have to be hard, but it can differ depending on what you're installing.
Reviews, analyses, how-tos, visual tours, hot issues and predictions about Microsoft's new OS.
Four years from now, the IT field will be a vastly different place. Will you be ready?
All Zones
Application Performance Zone
Business Continuity Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Security Management Zone
The SAS Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone
Windows Protection Zone
The Enterprise Search Zone
Software as a Service Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here
From Laggard to Leader: Transforming the Data Center
From Laggard to Leader: Transforming the Data Center
Register for this complimentary webcast today!
Go to the webcast 
Computerworld Executive Bulletin: Building a Robust Antivirus Defense
Download this Executive Bulletin (a $49.95 value) for free, compliments of MessageLabs.
(Source: MessageLabs) Antivirus software alone isn't enough to prevent today's speedy, sophisticated virus attacks. Security managers should consider multitiered approaches that include behavior scanning, appliances that check e-mail for worms, and restricting user access to dangerous Web sites. Download this Executive Bulletin (a $49.95 value) for free, compliments of MessageLabs, to learn more.
Download this executive briefing download
Windows® Enterprise Data Protection with Symantec Backup Exec™
Get this white paper now!
(Source: Symantec) With data protection becoming more distributed and IT resources increasingly constrained, businesses need a centralized data protection strategy that can manage multiple backup and recovery jobs. Learn how to address these critical enterprise challenges with dynamic disk-based data protection.
Download this white paper go
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
Project Portfolio Management - Boost the value of IT
Core Network Services Survey: The Costs and Impacts of DNS and IP Address Management
Six Project Metrics Every CIO Should Know for Application Delivery Success
View more whitepapers