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Hey, at least I got a letter right?
[edited by: digitalghost at 7:45 pm (utc) on June 12, 2006]
Yeah, that was the choice of words from the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, R. James Nicholson. Around here, 'tossed' is used often.
I feel confident in knowing that the Dept. that let someone walk out with millions of records is now launching an investigation... I think they suffer from delusions of competency.
Hey, at least I got a letter right?At least. Problem for the VA is.. multiply any postal rate by 25 + million and that letter cost them a bunch. And that's only the beginning of the financial loss. Among other costs there will be credit reports (probably at a reduced rate or free to the vet). And then personal loss for each vet should this information make into the wrong hands. I personally feel violated just knowing my info is unaccounted for. To my knowledge, it is still missing. The supervisor was sacked, I would hope the mid-level programmer was also sacked, but last that I read about him was that he was suspended without pay.
I know I used to carry program printouts home, to work on in the evening, where the environment was more comfortable, and my productivity rose. It worried me, but that didn't stop me. Mine was corporate property, not customer data. I'd be willing to bet more of this goes on than people would be comfortable knowing about.
The government agency charged with fighting identity theft said Thursday it had lost two government laptops containing sensitive personal data, the latest in a series of breaches encompassing millions of people....
The disclosure comes amid a widening data breach that is expected to cost the government hundreds of millions of dollars. In all, five government agencies have reported data theft, including the Veterans Affairs Department, which on May 22 acknowledged losing data on up to 26.5 million veterans.
It's one thing to suffer a loss thru burglary, as cited here [webmasterworld.com], and even that can be prevented. But to leave a laptop in a car, or to take one home from the office is simply asking someone to steal the thing.
What will it take to lock down the data files that have been amassed? Can it be done? Should someone be responsible? Who? If the agency that is fighting identity theft cannot prevent the loss of individual's personal data, who can?