Time Warner Loses Workers' Personal Data
Backup tapes went missing during shipment to storage site; no customer info lost.
Lucas Mearian, Computerworld
Time Warner has reported that a shipment of backup tapes with personal information of about 600,000 current and former employees went missing more than a month ago during a routine shipment to an offsite storage site.
The tapes, part of a routine shipment being taken to the site by off-site data storage company Iron Mountain didn't include data about Time Warner customers, the company said in a statement.
Protecting Employees?
The company told employees Monday that the data tapes went missing March 22.
"We are providing current and former employees with resources to monitor their credit reports while our investigation continues. We are working closely and aggressively with law enforcement and the outside data storage firm to get to the bottom of this matter," said Larry Cockell, Time Warner's chief security officer.
The U.S. Secret Service is working with both Time Warner and Boston-based Iron Mountain to investigate the missing tapes.
The $42 billion media company said in a statement that there is no evidence that the data has have been illegally accessed or misused. The company said it has contacted major credit agencies--Equifax, Experian and Trans Union--about the data loss.
After determining that publicizing the data loss wouldn't interfere with the investigation, Time Warner posted a statement about it on its Web site, as well as a letter to its employees about the incident and an FAQ.
In the letter to employees, Time Warner said the missing tapes contained data such as names and Social Security numbers of current and former U.S.-based employees, their dependents and beneficiaries.
Cockell said in the statement to employees that the company has made arrangements with Equifax to offer U.S. employees a free subscription to Equifaxa??s Credit Watch Gold credit monitoring service to help protect identity and credit information for 12 months.
Security Issues
Time Warner's disclosure follows on the heels of other high-profile security breaches in the United States. In March, a laptop containing data on 100,000 graduate students, alumni and applicants from the University of California, Berkeley, was stolen from a campus office.
Bart Lazar, a privacy and intellectual property lawyer and partner in the law firm of Seyfarth Shaw in Chicago, said that as data loss incidents pile up, there's greater potential that firms found responsible will have to change their data security standards. Most of the pressure, he said, may come not from Congress but from insurance companies that will require more stringent safeguards before signing with a client.
Part of the problem, Lazar said, is that companies don't have proper chain-of-custody requirements or encyption technology in place.
"I've dealt with many of these companies, and if you ask them what happens with their data . . . they can't chart it," he said. "Or the companies know what to do and they just haven't committed the resources to do it. Companies have to deploy their resources. I don't know what SANS [Institute] says the spending on security is, but it's not huge."
Lazar said data loss incidents will also likely give rise to more companies turning to internal data protection schemes instead of using third-party service providers or external data processors.
These big incidents [are] what leads to consciousness-raising and may lead to reasonable security standards, he said.
Reuters contributed to this report.

For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2007 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.
With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.
Windows Vista FAQ
Laptop Showcase
Related Security Articles
- PCI App Security: Who's Guarding the Data Bank? Compliance strategies for PCI's new application security requirements.
- Apple Posts Security Update 2008-007 Apple on Thursday posted Security Update 2008-007, a new security patch for client and server versions of Mac OS X 10.5...
- Firefox Add-on Blocks 'Clickjacking' Attacks NoScript now stymies new class of exploits by revealing secret content.
- Why Security Pros Hate SharePoint Microsoft's SharePoint collaboration platform is all the rage in today's business world, especially since third parties gained the ability to plug security holes. But managing it can still be a nightmare for IT security shops.
- Anatomy of a SQL Injection Attack This vendor-written tech primer has been edited to eliminate product promotion, but readers should note it will likely favor the submitter's approach.
Best Prices on Antivirus Software
AntiVirus 2008 (Full Product)Price: $13.95
VirusScan Plus 2008 - 3-User (Full Product)Price: $7.10
Anti-Virus 7.0 (Electronic Software Distribution)Price: $59.95
Norton AntiVirus 2008 - 3 UserPrice: $34.99
NOD32 AntiVirus 3.0Price: $19.00
Internet Security 2008 - 3 Users (Full Product)Price: $19.95
- Web Demo: Discover the Benefits of VoIP Is your company looking for a world class VoIP communications solution that will meet all of your business requirements? If so, join us for our Live Online Demo where you will receive a "guided tour" to the AltiGen Solution.
- PC World Webcast: Going Green Wondering how to make your business greener? These tips will help your business save money, and save the environment.
- A Windows Vista FAQ Corporate customers are deploying Windows Vista now, and Dell Services wants to help you understand the features of the new OS and how to plan your Windows Vista deployment.




