• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Big Blue’s Transport Partner Loses Employee Data

    May 21, 2007 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    This is a bit embarrassing for a security-conscious vendor like IBM, but according to a letter that the company sent out to employees last week, data tapes containing information on IBM’s own employees were lost in transport to an archiving facility in late February.

    According to the letter, which was sent to IT Jungle by an anonymous source and written by Barbara Brickmeier, vice president of human resources at the company, the IBM tapes were lost by accident and were not stolen, and assured employees that while the data included on the tapes included Social Security numbers, it was in a format that was unreadable on a PC. (So, it seems it was EBCDIC data from a System z mainframe, or possibly a System i box.)

    To demonstrate that it was serious about employee data security, employees were sent a package to subscribe to identity theft and credit monitoring services from Kroll, which would seem to suggest that IBM is not just worried about employee data on the tapes, but what might happen in the future if IBM Credit Union data slipped into the wrong hands. Considering that the data on the tapes, which fell off a truck in New York, were related to former IBMers for the most part, being enrolled in the Kroll security program doesn’t really do much to help them if someone can find a way to make use of the lost data.



                         Post this story to del.icio.us
                   Post this story to Digg
        Post this story to Slashdot

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags: Tags: mtfh_rc, Volume 16, Number 20 -- May 21, 2007

    Sponsored by
    Maxava

    Maxava Partner Webinar: Keeping IBM i Resilient in a Hybrid World

    The session will examine why disaster recovery strategies often fail when tested, how IBM Power Virtual Server is being positioned within enterprise architectures, and how organizations are using PowerVS for DR, HA, and production workloads.

    Register Now

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Acquisitions Fuel Growth for Reseller Logicalis Developer Population to Grow to Nearly 19 Million by 2010

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

TFH Volume: 16 Issue: 20

This Issue Sponsored By

    Table of Contents

    • IBM Outlines its Long-Term Financial Goals to Wall Street
    • Developer Population to Grow to Nearly 19 Million by 2010
    • Big Blue’s Transport Partner Loses Employee Data
    • Acquisitions Fuel Growth for Reseller Logicalis
    • Sirius Computer Builds Out Biz With DyComp Acquisition
    • IBM Outlines its Long-Term Financial Goals to Wall Street
    • IBM Expected to Launch Power6 Servers Today
    • As I See It: Operating on Overload
    • The Gulf Between Buyers and Sellers Widens in IT,
    • An i5 Platform: Q&A with Marlin Equity’s Top Brass

    Content archive

    • The Four Hundred
    • Four Hundred Stuff
    • Four Hundred Guru

    Recent Posts

    • Bob 1.0 Users Bugged By Lack Of One Feature
    • Here Come The AI-Based Code Modernization Offerings
    • Guru: Cohesion First – What A Procedure Should Be Responsible For
    • IBM Offers Trade-Ins On Storage To Grease The Upgrade Skids
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 28, Number 14
    • What IBM i Ideas Are Cooking In IBM’s Ideas Portal?
    • Early Bob Excels In Medhost IBM i Tryout
    • Counting The Cost Of AI Inference – And Projecting It Far Out
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 28, Number 13
    • The Next Generation Of IBM i Talent in GenAI Action

    Subscribe

    To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

    Pages

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Contributors
    • Four Hundred Monitor
    • IBM i PTF Guide
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe

    Search

    Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle