[Dataloss] Reporting Dataloss
Thomas Raef
traef at ebasedsecurity.com
Sat May 3 18:08:27 UTC 2008
Depending on the state laws governing this incident, the school and the vendor don’t have the option of not notifying the “potential” victims. Data loss is data loss.
I’d start with the State Attorneys office. I believe they have jurisdiction of that.
Thomas J. Raef
e-Based Security, LLC
http://www.ebasedsecurity.com
traef at ebasedsecurity.com
1-888-251-5803
From: dataloss-bounces at attrition.org [mailto:dataloss-bounces at attrition.org] On Behalf Of Aaron Allen
Sent: Saturday, May 03, 2008 11:11 AM
To: dataloss at attrition.org
Subject: [Dataloss] Reporting Dataloss
Back in November 2007, I uncovered a data breach containing about 7000 partial names, addresses and full SSNs of students that graduated from the public school system from which I graduated in 2002. The data was publicly posted on a website of a vendor that the school had used. Here is an example line from the leak:
Permanent Number
LAST NAME
FIRST
NAME
Geocode Status
Address
ZIP
GRADE
401999999
XXXXX
......hia
.......estown Rd
40511
D
09
Note that I changed the social security number to protect the innocent, but everything else is the same. As you can see, the data provided was full social, last three letters of the first name, partial address, full zip, the high school the student was attending in the year 2001, and the grade they were in when they attended that school. I notified both the vendor and the school district and they removed the information. They told me they would not notify the affected individuals because the amount of information contained in the leak was so small that it was useless to any potential ID theif.
However, because the breach targets such a small group of individuals I was easily able to go through the information and using publicly available information fill in a lot of missing information and obtain full SSN, name, addresses, and phone numbers. I have also notified the FCC and attempted to contact other agencies, but no one seems to really care that this data loss has occurred. Now, several months later, I have found out that I am a victim of identity theft (someone filed taxes under my SSN). While there is no way to link these two incidents, it has caused me to look back into this data leak I discovered back in Nov.
So, my question to the list is what is the best way and to whom do you report a data loss event that neither of the responsible parties are willing to disclose?
Or, am I just being too paranoid and the amount of data that was leaked should not be a cause for concern?
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