After all the scare stories about MI5 officers leaving their laptops in pubs
it seems that people are still unable to look after their mobile computers.
A survey of 500 information security professionals conducted by the
Ponemon
Institute found that more than 80 per cent of firms have put critical data
at risk by losing a laptop containing sensitive information in the past 12
months.
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The
US
Department of Transportation has lost two laptops in Florida recently, one
stolen from a conference room in Orlando on 24 April and the second half-inched
in July from a government vehicle in Miami.
The latter contained the names, addresses, birthdates and social security
numbers of some 133,000 Florida residents.
According to security experts, laptops and PDAs are stolen to order by
cyber-criminals because they offer one of the easiest ways to bypass company
security and access sensitive data.
Ponemon's report suggested that the problem is companies not knowing where
critical data resides.
Some 64 per cent of respondents had never conducted an audit of sensitive
data, so it leaks out on laptops, mobiles and USB data sticks without anyone
knowing.
The Ponemon phenomenon has been known to security consultants for some time.
"Too many IT managers still think that the essence of security is to harden the
perimeter of their network against internet hacks and worms," said one security
specialist.
"But that is so 1999 and all it does is protect bits of the physical
infrastructure while critical data is whizzing around unprotected on laptops and
email-enabled mobiles outside the perimeter fence."
The increasingly mobile nature of business means that data has to be
protected wherever it resides. For mobile devices, that means using encryption.
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