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Study Suggests Your IT Staff May Be Snooping On You


Just when you thought records, passwords, and other personal information might be safe at the office, Reuters reports that a new study by Cyber-Ark, a data security company, found that 35-percent of Information Technology (IT) professionals use their digital know-how to access confidential information at work. This marks a 2-percent increase since a similar study was conducted last year.

The 400 senior IT professionals surveyed (in the United States and U.K.) admitted to sneaking a peek at everything from salary details to minutes from board meetings. However, the study found the most commonly snooped data were human resource records. Customer databases, merger and acquisition plans, layoff lists, and marketing information rounded out the list of most snooped information.

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Computers

Laid-Off Workers Taking Data With Them

Laid Off Workers Taking Data With Them

We've all heard the news about layoffs -- the daily grind of corporate downsizing that has started to sound like the background noise of a failing economy. The majority of corporations are giving their laid-off people some sort of severance package to help tide them over, at least for a few weeks, but a new survey is showing that most workers are doing something to take care of themselves: stealing confidential data from their (now) former employers.

According to the survey from Symantec, a firm that produces security software in a variety of flavors, 60-percent of laid-off workers take some sort of confidential data with them. That could include customer contact lists, software design documents, or any manner of proprietary information. Most workers feel that, since they helped to create this data, they therefore own a piece of it. And while the courts likely wouldn't agree, right now, employers aren't doing much to stop them; 82-percent of companies are not investigating what documents former employees might be taking with them, and nearly a quarter of laid-off employees still have network access when their paychecks stop. That, system administrators, is asking for trouble! [From: CNET News]

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Cell Phones, Computers, BlackBerry

Top UK Government Official's BlackBerry Infiltrated After Shanghai Fling



This item almost reads like something out of a spy story: 'Western Government Official Conned By Seductress.'

But the real news is this: a senior member of British Prime Minster Gordon Brown's staff, during a visit to Shanghai earlier this year, decided to spend the night with a pretty young local woman, and discovered the next morning his BlackBerry was missing.

At risk? At the very least, access to data on the handheld device and possibly to the computer servers at 10 Downing Street, the official office of the Prime Minister (Great Britain's version of the White House).

While the British government claims no data loss or infiltration, the incident highlights the risk of bringing sensitive information and access into China – a problem that could balloon to great volume during the upcoming Olympics in Beijing, when thousands of international business and government leaders visit China.

The Chinese government has apparently been stepping up its espionage efforts during the last year, to the point where Jonathan Evans, the director-general of intelligence agency MI5, issued a warning that the threat could impact Great Britain's economy if banks are compromised. (We assume other countries are similarly at risk.)

Despite all the warnings from governments and data security firms that people should protect their data (by avoiding everything from e-mail scams to carrying their laptops on international trips) the fact that the breach occurred in such a low-tech manner (a one-night stand is so cliché) reminds us all that good old-fashioned person-to-person contact is the possibly the greatest risk to information security overall. [Source: The Sunday Times.]

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