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    Laptop Security

    Discussion in 'Lenovo' started by Karl Gruber, Jul 24, 2006.

  1. Karl Gruber

    Karl Gruber Notebook Consultant

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    Companies take costly steps to secure laptops


    By Jon Swartz, USA TODAY
    SAN FRANCISCO — Big U.S. companies are taking tough measures to shore up laptop security amid a rash of thefts.
    The actions of Ernst & Young, Fidelity Investments and other high-profile victims underscore the balancing act for executives, who must weigh the costs of additional security and customer privacy with the financial benefits of a mobile workforce.

    "There is a trade-off between the cost of security and how much security you actually get," says Robert Seliger, CEO of Sentillion, a data-security company.

    About 88 million Americans have been exposed to potential ID theft since February 2005 as a result of reported data breaches, says the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse. In at least 43 instances — a fourth of all reported breaches — stolen or missing laptops were involved. Few of the laptops have been recovered.

    What companies are doing:

    • Ernst & Young started encrypting — or scrambling — data on laptops for its 30,000-person workforce in the USA and Canada after a laptop with personal information on about 38,000 customers was stolen from an employee's car in February.

    • Fidelity accelerated encryption on thousands of employee laptops. The mutual fund giant was the victim of a laptop breach in March that affected data of 196,000 current and former Hewlett-Packard workers. It also is increasing training on laptop security and protection of customer data.

    • Aetna undertook several preventive measures after a laptop containing names, addresses and Social Security numbers for 59,000 members was swiped from an employee's car in April. The insurer had employees re-encrypt and recertify files. Every company PC was audited to ensure files were properly encrypted. Aetna also tightened restrictions for storage devices such as thumb drives.

    Encryption can be pricey. Gartner estimates a company with 100,000 customer accounts can spend $30 to $40 per laptop on data encryption. Yet, the cost of a data breach is even higher. Companies with 100,000 customer accounts will spend at least $90 per account if data are compromised or exposed — not including fines and lawsuits, Gartner says.

    Walking off with a laptop is easy. Few have alarms, and only a few have encrypted data. People also tend to leave them in unlocked cars or unattended at airports, says Keith Burt, project director of San Diego's Computer and Technology Crime High-Tech Team.

    As more people store data in a mobile environment, laptops have become more attractive to identity thieves, says Bob Egner, a marketing executive at security software maker Pointsec Mobile Technologies. Personal information sells on the Internet for about $1 per stolen record, Egner says.
     
  2. Karl Gruber

    Karl Gruber Notebook Consultant

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    My T43 has a fingerprint reader. In addition to the IBM security software, I've always thought my laptop to be as secure as Fort Knox. Am I wrong? If somebody steals my laptop, can they extract the information off my machine?
     
  3. SkiBunny

    SkiBunny Notebook Deity

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    Yes its TPM helps secure/encyrpt the data on your drive.
     
  4. Karl Gruber

    Karl Gruber Notebook Consultant

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    Ok, the real question is how secure are the T series laptops with fingerprint readers and all the IBM security software configured? Is my T43 a fancy doorstop if stolen or a thiefs new laptop?
     
  5. Alpha_Beta

    Alpha_Beta Notebook Enthusiast

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    depends, do you have everything (TPM chip, etc.) turned on? even then someone could probably take your hard-drive out and stick it in an external enclosure. From there it would act like just another external hard-drive. There is the IBM secure drive thing in the software. that would help to protect anything in it. Of course, one thing you have to look out for is leaving your wireless antenna (blue tooth and 802.11) on when you're not using it. Some researchers found that buggy drivers allows people to access your computer while it's still on via those methods. sometimes the thiefs will have a handheld blue tooth finders just to find a laptop in a car.
     
  6. Karl Gruber

    Karl Gruber Notebook Consultant

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    I have the TPM chip turned on. I've configured a secure drive. The laptop rarely leaves my house. I don't have bluetooth on my T43. I have rigged my T43 with plastic explosives. I placed the explosives in the PCMCIA card slot. I have rigged the explosives to a cellular phone and GPS. If a thief steals my laptop, he/she will die a very painful death.
     
  7. glentium

    glentium Notebook Evangelist

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    whoooah!
    thanks for the tip, Karl. I won't include your T43 in my "ToSteal" List... :)
     
  8. Alpha_Beta

    Alpha_Beta Notebook Enthusiast

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    Sounds good, just be sure you don't bump it accidentally :p
     
  9. Karl Gruber

    Karl Gruber Notebook Consultant

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    Don't forget about static electricity. This can trigger an unintentional detonation.
     
  10. Alpha_Beta

    Alpha_Beta Notebook Enthusiast

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    Electricity in the PCMCIA slot??!! what are people thinking of?
     
  11. Karl Gruber

    Karl Gruber Notebook Consultant

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    Rubbing of laptop on carpet surface can trigger detonation of said C4 in the PCMCIA slot. HA<HA