Re: Navy Probes Data Leak on 100,000 Sailors, Marines

The Navy said on Friday that it was trying to determine how personal

> information on more than 100,000 Navy and Marine Corp aviators and air > crew wound up on a publicly available Web site for more than six > months. > In a fresh case of private information on military personnel being > compromised, the full names and social security numbers of both active > and reserve members appeared on the Naval Safety Center Web site at >
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last December. > Those affected are believed to include any Navy or Marine Corp aviator > who has served during the past 20 years. > The same information was also disseminated late last year to Navy and > Marine Corps commands on 1,083 program disks mailed out as part of the > service's Web Enabled Safety Program. > The Naval Safety Center found out about the problem and removed the > information from the web site on Thursday, a week after the recovery > of a stolen Veterans Affairs Department laptop that contained > sensitive information on more than 26 million U.S. military veterans > and service members. > The center is now recalling the mailed program disks. > As in the case of the Veterans Affairs laptop, the Navy said there was > no evidence that any of the disseminated data has been used illegally. > But the service is notifying those affected by mail and setting up a > 24-hour call center to handle queries. > Safety center spokeswoman Evelyn Odango said the problem appeared to > be an errant file. > "The information was inadvertently included in a file that was then > posted on the Web," she said. "We found out about it through a Web > site user and it was removed immediately." > Copyright 2006 Reuters Limited. > [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Is this getting to be a bad joke, or > what? Every day or three of late we hear of files which should remain > totally private and confidential somehow making their way into the > public's view, mostly because of thievery of laptops, but now in this > instance, by being put on display on the web. And I suspect if we > used our imaginations, with all sorts of number combinations we could > find even more stuff on the web which should ideally _not_ be on > display. PAT]

All confidential information should always be in an encrypted file! - thereoughttobealaw

Reply to
Rick Merrill
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