TSA Loses Hard Drive With Personnel Info
WrongSizeGlass writes "A portable hard drive containing personnel data for former and current employees, went missing from a controlled area at the TSA.
From the article: 'The Transportation Security Administration has lost a computer hard drive containing Social Security numbers, bank data and payroll information for about 100,000 employees.'"
Maybe using Social Security numbers for just about everything isn't such a good idea.
From the BBC article:
Salary details, addresses, dates of birth, national insurance and phone numbers were on the machine which was stolen from a printing firm.
It is now too easy for huge quantities of private data to be carried around on laptops and memory sticks, often by people who do not understand the consequnces of failing to protect that data. Companies need to be held to account when data is lost.
Any sufficiently advanced bug is indistinguishable from a feature.
There's your problem. I can see the allure of using a portable drive, in that you can easily move the data around from computer to computer, but really, we have a better way to move the data: The bloody network! That HDD should have been screwed into a locked case mounted in a rack bolted to the floor of a securely locked room.
Support the mob or mysteriously disappear.
I've been in gov't IT for 15 years, this should never have left the server farm. If it had to be on a portable device, it should have been a laptop and heavily encrypted, not that I can see a good reason to give anyone that info. The retirement planning people can make do with very little info.
When you sympathize with stupidity, you start thinking like an idiot.