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Ameritrade Customer Data Lost

Rollie Hawk writes "Continuing the recent trend of customer data blunders in the news, Ameritrade has announced the loss of the personal data of up to 200,000 customers. The suspected cause is a routing error, but not the network kind. The online discount broker admitted that a backup tape of customer account data from 2000 to 2003 has been misplaced. They claim the cause is an error on the part of a shipping company. The tape was identified as missing in February, soon after being shipped. According to spokeswoman Donna Kush, nothing suspicious has been reported. Further blaming the shipping company, she explained that "this was not an Ameritrade Systems issue or a compromise of our technology. This was related to a third party vendor." It's doubtful that current and former customers with exploited information will care how this occurred. She further claimed that Ameritrade "has every reason to believe" that the tape has either been destroyed or is being held by the shipper. There's no word yet on how they arrived at this conclusion."

4 of 324 comments (clear)

  1. Data loss... or ... data collection? by rsborg · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Maybe I'm wandering into tinfoil-hat territory here, but what's with this recent spate of customer data loss? I mean, holy hell.. there's been something like several millions of records of customer data being reported as "lost" or "stolen" lately... is someone trying to collect data on everyone surreptitiously?

    I mean, it's probably more likely that some law got passed in the past few years that's forcing companies to highlight all these incidents of compromised data, but it seems pretty spooky that we just recently hear about all these stories...

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  2. personal data protection == big sister by torpor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    the only solution is the eradication, entirely, of the notion of 'personal data'. by that, i mean: you personally should be recording everything, not just the company. both sides should have their full records, for there to be 'fairness'.

    until there is such a common, accepted, standardized practice, there will always be a mis-balance of corporate-Entity(knowledge of individuals) versus indepent-Entity(knowledge of corporate state). the reason we hate big brother is because we have no control over him; we'd accept his conditions, if turnabout was enforced by the state, and we had just as much public oversight of government as 'it' does 'us'.

    from now on, simply record every single thing you do, anything thats a part of an agreement made with some company, yourself. save every single thing 'they' print you, put it in your system so that you data-mine them. use your digital prowess to record as much of your 'person->corporation' interaction as possible.

    do it for a year, and then see how you feel about corporate loss of data.

    its an odd thing, but in fact total-awareness is the only solution to problems of individual privacy versus corporate responsibility. its a wry old universe, doing the irony thing again..

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    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  3. Ameritrade Customer Service by kid_wonder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just gave them a call to close my account and I must say that they (or at least the person I talked to) was well versed on the talking points from the press release.

    1) Blame third party
    2) Data is not lost, we just don't know where it is
    3) There has been no evidence of the data being used

    The woman I spoke with was pretty adamant about making these points and really tried to keep me from closing my account.

    I am not sure if this sort of revelation usually results in a significant loss of business or not, but it would appear they were well prepared to rebut peoples concerns.

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  4. Re:Question by soconnor99 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The data was encrypted. According to Ameritrade (my broker), special hardware is required to read the information, even if the tape was found.

    All this information was sent in a letter last week.

    As a customer, I feel it was nice for them to keep me in the loop, but I don't feel the least bit threatened.

    Pretty much every company I've ever worked for uses some sort of courier service to move backup tapes off site. If something happens with that courier, after every reasonable precaution was taken by Ameritrade (which it certainly appears it has), it's pretty much out of their control.

    They said what's happened, and what they think the exposure is. What else would you have them do, not send their backup tapes offsite?