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'Home Office' disc wedged in laptop sold on eBay

By Rosalie Marshall
Feb 29 2008 3:39PM
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A laptop containing what could be sensitive Home Office data has been sold on eBay.

'Home Office' disc wedged in laptop sold on eBay
The laptop was bought by an unsuspecting consumer who subsequently took the equipment to be fixed by Leapfrog computer repairs in Greater Manchester. It was only as the laptop casing was opened that a disc was discovered wedged beneath the keyboard.

“It is a real mystery as to why the disc was jammed there, although it was obviously put there deliberately," said Lee Bevan, Leapfrog's managing director.

“The only way a disc can get inside the system would be through the CD Rom but this is a sealed unit,” Bevan added.

The disc had the words "Home Office" and "Confidential" written on it. But Leapfrog was not able to verify the authenticity as the contents were encrypted. If the disc is proven to be from the Home Office, it would be another major public sector IT security embarrassment.

IT experts said that encryption on the disc shows the public sector is learning from previous mistakes, but warned that the Home Office remains vulnerable to data leaks.

“Unfortunately accidents like this are not going to stop happening so we can only hope that other government departments follow the Home Office's lead and adopt full disc encryption,” said Brian Spector, general manager for content protection firm Workshare, adding “With the statistics showing that nearly 500 government devices have gone missing since 2001, it was only a matter of time before a confidential disc inadvertently ended up on eBay.”

Alan Bentley, Lumension Security European vice president, pointed out encryption alone is not infallible. “Computer hackers are determined individuals with the potential to crack one layer of security,” Bentley said. “And, we certainly shouldn’t be relying on one line of protection when it comes to our national security.”

Bentley said safeguarding sensitive data needs to begin at the network level. “By monitoring and only allowing known good devices and authorised individuals to connect to a network and download data is essential.”

He added the key is to reducing data breach risk is to have data access control and encryption working hand-in-hand, as well as giving individuals who have rights to download data from the network stringent security checks.

The encrypted IT equipment is now in the hands of the Greater Manchester Police, who are investigating the incident.

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