VA Continues Its Annual Tradition Of Losing Laptop With Unencrypted Sensitive Data
from the the-ministry-of-data-leaks dept
When we last checked in with the Veterans Administration (VA) it was to suggest that it rename itself the "Ministry of Data Leaks." That's because every year or so they admit that they've lost a computer that happens to contain unencrypted personal data on VA members. And, each report seems to get worse than the previous one. So you would think that, by now, the VA would have at least put in place some system to encrypt and protect the data it stores. That would be wishful thinking. It's now come out that the VA has had two major data breaches in just the last month -- both involving laptops that had unencrypted data.Of course, this comes after those earlier breaches cost taxpayers tens of millions of dollars in notifications and in response to a class action lawsuit, leading Congress to require the VA to encrypt its data. Apparently, the VA didn't bother to actually follow through on that requirement. Congress is now investigating again, with the following statement from Rep. Steve Buyer in kicking off the investigation:
"I attribute the continued lack of security to poor memory among VA's senior management, and its failure to realize the magnitude of the problem that could have been prevented," Buyer writes. "This is an inexcusable abrogation of responsibility that would not be tolerated in any private company. Veterans and American taxpayers expect a higher standard from the VA...."Not that I expect a Congressional investigation to be very effective, but at some point you have to wonder what folks at the VA are thinking.
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Filed Under: data leak, encryption
Companies: va, veterans administration
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Oh please
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ignorant remarks are . . . ignorant
I know first hand that I can walk into any VA hospital at any hou5 of the night or any day of the year (like I once did Thanksgiving Day at 4am 400 miles from home) and the person treating me has a total, in-depth, chronological, searchable history of every thing about me on screen. They have every allergy, every medication past and current, every procedure, every blood pressure reading, every blood test, everything everything, everything.
I assure you that few physicians anywehere else have that info unless they are using one of the few commercial systems based on that of the VA.
So this not not merely (!) about SS numbers or unlisted phone numbers. The real problem, contrary to the uniformed comment is that the VA knows very well how to use a computer.
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American taxpayers might expect more, but Veterans? Oh hell no. The VA is known for incompetence in most areas. The average wait time on disability is two years and they're liable to lose your medical records at least once.
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Re:
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not hard
EVERY laptop we buy goes through a central receiving facility, where it has a standard image put on it - that includes whole disk encryption.
If one of these laptops gets lost, its a boat anchor without that password.
Also, we use, extensively, a secure remote access system through which all employes can access data - securely and without storing anything on the local hard drive.
It really isn't hard. Expensive? Yes, but no more expensive than responding to a lawsuit, and the money is spent in a more productive manner!
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Re: not hard
Typical disk encryption is not uncrackable
"Expensive? Yes"
Doesn't have to be
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No incentive to change
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VA Data Protection
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DVA not VA
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HAHAHAHA
So they are saying the reason for this is that the VA had a SENIOR moment. HAHA
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Re: ignorant remarks are . . . ignorant
Um. OK.
"The real problem, contrary to the uniformed comment is that the VA knows very well how to use a computer."
As I said, it's not that they can use a computer *well*, it's that they can use it at all.
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