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| Identity theft shakes whole communities. Pictured is a free community shred to combat identity theft. The event, sponsored by Crime Stoppers, Shred-It and Wal-Mart allowed people to dispose of sensitive documents securely. This event kicked off community shreds in 200 locations across the country. |
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There was a time about a decade or so ago when a handful of infant abductions from hospital rooms and wards created national headlines and fear among healthcare security executives. As rare as such incidents were, they knew that – if it happened in their facility – the fallout from an already personally tragic happening would be catastrophic and long-lasting.
Welcome to 2006. Today, CEOs from investment firms and drug store chains to phone companies have caught on to the fact that data and identity theft now can grab those national headlines and be even more catastrophic and longer-lasting as client, customer and business partner lawsuits get filed.
For the most part, there are solid policies and procedures in place, of course. They need reinforcing by top management and security all the time. For laptops, there also are software “fixes” from firms such as Absolute and SyNET. Such solutions automatically wipe data if a laptop is lost or stolen or can track and “call home” so that security or law enforcement can locate and, hopefully, recover the laptop and its sensitive data when the unit connects into the Internet or even a strange LAN.
Here is a quick checklist of laptop security best practices provided to me by John Livingston of Absolute of laptop security best practices -- from common sense to high-tech solutions -- that can help protect your enterprise’s mobile road warrior.