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Previous Posts
5/25/2005
Chronology of Recent Data Thefts, FTC Comissioner Predicts Hell to Pay for Corporate America
Following is a chronology of recent data breaches courtesy BeSpacific.com and cataloged by the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse. One positive thing, at least for our industry, is that this list manages to put the recent thefts from data brokers such as Lexis Nexis or Choicepoint in the greater context of what is apparently the leaky sieve model of privacy found in corporate America and academia.

Last week the wonderfully named Orson Swindle, a commissioner at the Federal Trade Commission since 1997 provided his impromptu thoughts on the situation at a recent cyber-crime conference:
"Everybody's screaming, all the political figures up on Capitol Hill, about identity theft," he said. "It's not identity theft, it's the theft of information... While politicians raise hell about identity theft, what we're really talking about is the failure to protect valuable currency.... Corporate boards better start paying attention, because they haven't been."

Also, according to Swindle, the pattern of corporate data breaches "Indicates to me the industry has, to a great extent, been irresponsible, and somebody has got to pay." He suggested the first people to pay might be corporate lawyers. The lax data protection, according to Swindle, is being driven in part by those general counsels who sit around and say, "be careful about what you promise in privacy and information security because you might get sued for it."
DATE
NAME
TYPE OF BREACH
NUMBER
Feb. 15, 2005
ChoicePoint
ID thieves accessed
145,000
Feb. 25 , 2005
Bank of America
Lost backup tape
1,200,000
Feb. 25, 2005
PayMaxx
Exposed online
25,000
March 8, 2005
DSW/Retail Ventures
Hacking
100,000
March 10, 2005
LexisNexis
Passwords compromised
32,000
March 11, 2005
Univ. of CA, Berkeley
Stolen laptop
98,400
March 11, 2005
Boston College
Hacking
120,000
March 12, 2005
NV Dept. of Motor Vehicle
Stolen computer
8,900
March 20, 2005 Northwestern Univ. Hacking 21,000
March 20, 2005
Univ. of NV., Las Vegas
Hacking
5,000
March 22, 2005
Calif. State Univ., Chico
Hacking
59,000
March 23, 2005
Univ. of CA, San Francisco
Hacking
7,000
April 8, 2005
San Jose Med. Group
Stolen computer
185,000
April 11, 2005
Tufts University
Hacking
106,000
April 12, 2005
LexisNexis
Passwords compromised
Additional 280,000
April 14, 2005
Polo Ralph Lauren/HSBC
Hacking
180,000
April 14, 2005 Calif. FasTrack Dishonest Insider 4,500
April 18, 2005
DSW/ Retail Ventures
Hacking
Additional 1,300,000
April 20, 2005
Ameritrade
Lost backup tape
200,000
April 21, 2005 Carnegie Mellon Univ. Hacking 19,000
April 26, 2005 Mich. State Univ's Wharton Center Hacking 40,000
April 26, 2005 Christus St. Joseph's Hospital Stolen computer 19,000
April 28, 2005 Georgia Southern Univ. Hacking "tens of thousands"
April 28, 2005 Wachovia,
Bank of America,
PNC Financial Services Group and
Commerce Bancorp
Dishonest insiders 680,000
April 29, 2005 Oklahoma State Univ. Missing laptop 20,000
May 2, 2005 Time Warner Lost backup tapes 600,000
May 4, 2005 CO. Health Dept. Stolen laptop 1,600 (families)
May 16, 2005 Westborough Bank Dishonest insider 750
May 18, 2005 Jackson Comm. College, Michigan Hacker 8,000
May 20, 2005 Purdue Univ. Hacker 11,000




TOTAL

5,476,150

Yikes. Bad times. Read the rest of the Swindle article here and for more on pending legislation relating to personal data theft, try privacyrights.org.

-- MDT

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