Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
Security

WEEKEND FEATURE
Beware of Data Dumpster Divers

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Beware of Data Dumpster Divers

Trashing an old PC with sensitive data on the hard drive can be almost as bad as leaving it out on the sidewalk in terms of data security. Even e-recycling programs sometimes don't take proper precautions to ensure the computer leaves its original owner with no private information intact. The best recyclers will erase a PC's hard drive or, better yet, crush it before it moves on to its next destination.


Considering CRM solutions?
You first need to understand CRM best practices. Before committing to a CRM purchase and implementation, it's good to know the experience of those who have already "been there, done that." It can save time and prevent costly missteps. Download Free Research.

Some 30 percent of businesses in the UK leave data, some of it sensitive, on their PCs when they dispose of them, according to research findings released this week by computer maker Lenovo.

In the survey of 300 businesses commissioned by the UK-Ireland arm of the company, 29 percent of IT managers in large companies with 1,000 or more employees and 30 percent of them in mid-sized ones with 250 to 999 workers revealed that they had possibly, probably or definitely left data on PCs when they disposed of them.

"It is essential for organizations to consider secure data disposal when refreshing end-of-life computers in order to avoid becoming susceptible to potentially immeasurable business risk," Chris Wells, Lenovo's vice president for the UK and Ireland, said.

Nigerian Bandits

Lenovo's findings are slightly higher than those released in a BT study last year. That research, which analyzed 317 secondhand hard drives purchased in the UK, Australia, Germany and the United States, found that 23 percent of the drives that originated with businesses contained enough information to identify those businesses and that 5 percent had sensitive information on them.

Just days after the release of the BT study, the BBC reported that bank account details for thousands of Her Majesty's subjects were being sold for less than Pounds 20 (US$40) a pop by Nigerians who had scrounged the info from recycled UK PCs sent to Africa.

Leaving data on a PC when disposing of it is not necessarily a bad thing, however, if a computer is headed to a recycler that's trusted by a business. That's because the recycler will erase a PC's hard drive or, better yet, crush it before it moves on to its next destination.

Hole in Hard Drive

"All of the assets that we receive that have resale value, will go through a data wipe," Joe Strathmann, worldwide asset recovery services senior manager for Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) in Round Rock, Texas, told the E-Commerce Times.

"Systems that don't have any remarketing value will have a hole punched in their hard drives or be completely shredded," he added.

By customer Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse request, Dell will do an on-site data wipe of hard drives before they reach one of the company's environmental recycling partners, he noted.

"Even when we do the on-site data wipe, we still do the data wipe at the environmental partners as an added precaution," he noted.

In addition, those partners are monitored by outside auditors to ensure compliance with Dell's data destruction requirements.

Concern over leaving sensitive data on PCs when they're disposed of, Strathmann said, "is the number one reason in the U.S. that customers choose to use a third-party provider like Dell to handle the disposal of their assets."

Fly-by-Nighters

Enlisting a professional computer trashman, though, isn't a guarantee of secure PC disposal, asserted Kory Bostwick, the principal in PC Disposal, a computer recycler in Olathe, Kan.

"There are a few legitimate companies out there doing what we do," he told the E-Commerce Times. "There are a lot of fly-by-night guys that don't."

One of PC Disposal's selling points is that its work is insured.

"It order to get insurance, you have to meet certain requirements from the insurance company for processes and controls," he explained.

"Typically the guy out there that's saying he's doing this stuff for free doesn't carry insurance," he added.

"Our customers enjoy the sense of comfort that comes with a certificate from us that says a computer with a particular serial number has undergone a DoD (U.S. Department of Defense) data cleansing," he maintained.

Huge Problem

Cleansing a hard drive is different from just reformatting it, explained Erik Bisiar, president of Recycle Techs in Spokane, Wash.

"If you do a format on a hard drive," he told the E-Commerce Times, "that's not wiping it. That's still 100 percent recoverable."

Wiping a drive involves rewriting its surface with dummy data -- usually just zeros and ones -- a number of times. The highest DoD standard is seven times.

"There are lots of people who think they're taking precautions, but they're really not," Bisiar said.

"I've seen a lot of businesses just take their stuff to the dump and not wipe the hard drives," he added. "That can be a huge problem."


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by John P. Mello Jr.


Related News Alerts

Dell Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by John P. Mello Jr.

McAfee Gives Enterprise Macs a Bodyguard
November 02, 2009
When it comes to Mac use in an enterprise environment, running third-party security software isn't just a matter of using an abundance of caution. It may also be a matter of complying with governance mandates and regulations. McAfee's new Endpoint Protection for the Mac targets enterprise systems handling large amounts of sensitive data.
Adobe Elements Buffs Up for Mac
October 26, 2009
For the almost-but-not-quite pro photog, Adobe Photoshop Elements offers a collection of tools that go beyond most free offerings but don't dish out the wallet-busting feature overload of full Photoshop. In the past, some Mac users have been annoyed with Adobe for having versions of Elements ready for Windows months before they were out on Mac. With version 8, both platforms get their chance at the same time.
GoToMyPC Gets Ready to Go to Your Mac
October 19, 2009
GoToMyPC has been a popular remote access product in Citrix's portfolio, and previous versions have allowed any Net-connected computer to remotely control a PC. A new version, soon to come out of beta and into full release, can access Macs as well. With the growth of both telecommuting and Macs in the enterprise, Citrix felt the time was right.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network