Campus Cards, College and University Identification and Security

Stanford laptop with employee data stolen

Monday, June 9, 2008

A laptop at Stanford University containing personnel records, including Social Security numbers, of 72,000 current and former employees, was reported missing from the university last week. The university joins the growing ranks of schools–more than 70 in 2007 alone–that have lost sensitive data.

Feelings among Stanford officials is that the laptop was probably stolen for is value and that the perpetrator was unaware of the files on the computer’s hard drive. The stolen computer does not contain driver’s license numbers, credit card numbers, bank account numbers or other financial information, the university said.

The San Diego-based Identity Theft Resource Center which tracks theft of personal data, encourages institutions to keep such data on password-protected files and to encrypt personal information. The university would not say whether the information on the laptop was encrypted. However, there was no indication the data had been accessed.

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Credit card trafficker Vladislav Anatolievich Horohorin, 27, was arrested Aug. 7 in Nice, France by French authorities and brought up on indictment charges unsealed. Horohorin, otherwise known by his online alias, “BadB” of Moscow, was indicated by a federal jury in back in November 2009 on charges of access device fraud and aggravated identity theft. Those charges are now unsealed today in U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia.

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It takes young adults–those between the ages of 18 and 24–some 132 days before they realize they’ve had their identity stolen. In that time, they’ve lost five times the amount of money compared to other age groups, according to Washington State University’s student newspaper.

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Aware Inc. has announced it has supplied a major U.S. government agency with client and server-based software products for the personal identity verification (PIV) employee credentialing system implemented by IT services firm Jacob & Sundstrom.

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An UConn computer with the names and Social Security Numbers of more than 10,000 university applicants was stolen, according to a local news report.

The computer, stolen from an IT storage cabinet at university’s West Hartford campus, had applicant files ranging from 2004 through July 30. UConn officials are still investigating the theft, which was discovered on Aug. 3.

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Toshiba is gearing up to launch a new laptop featuring a smart card and biometric fingerprint reader, according to mylaptop.co.uk.

The 14-inch Toshiba Tecra M11 will also feature an Intel Core i3 or i5 processor, 1366 x 768-pixel display, 3G HSPA embedded broadband and Toshiba’s EasyGuard impact protection technology.

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Thousands of students’ personal information were illegally obtained during a national college entrance exam in China and then sold to a local news reporter for a mere $43, according to the Global Times.

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