Archive for Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Personal data leaked over LimeWire network
Justice Stephen G. Breyer is among the victims in the security breach on the file-sharing network, discovered long after it occurred.
Sometime late last year, an employee of a McLean, Va., investment firm decided to trade some music, or maybe a movie, with like-minded users of the online file-sharing network LimeWire while using a company computer. In doing so, he inadvertently opened the private files of his firm, Wagner Resource Group, to the public.
That exposed the names, dates of birth and Social Security numbers of about 2,000 of the firm’s clients, including Supreme Court Justice Stephen G. Breyer.
The breach was not discovered for nearly six months. A reader of washingtonpost .com’s Security Fix blog found the information while searching LimeWire in June.
Services such as LimeWire, known as peer-to-peer networks, link computers directly, allowing users to swap files with other users without the need for a central website to manage the exchange.
What users may not be aware of is that the software that facilitates file sharing may be configured to allow access to a portion, if not all, of a user’s documents.
Robert Boback, chief executive of Tiversa Inc., the company hired by Wagner to help contain the data breach, said such breaches are hardly rare. About 40% to 60% of all data leaks take place outside of a company’s secured network, usually as a result of employees or contractors installing file-sharing software on company computers.
“We’ve seen a lot of instances where a company will be working on a product that’s not even released yet, and the diagrams for that product are already out on the Net,” Boback said. “The individuals on this list are at a very high risk, almost imminent, of identity theft.”
Tiversa found that more than a dozen LimeWire users in places as far away as Sri Lanka and Colombia downloaded the list of personal data from the Wagner network.
“To me, this was devastating,” said Phylyp Wagner, founder of the investment firm. “I didn’t even know what peer-to-peer was. I do now.”
A spokesman for Breyer said the justice had no comment on the security breach.
- Clinton campaigns for Obama
- Silver Lake's former Black Cat bar was a starting point for the gay rights movement
- Barack Obama: In search of identity
- Mormon Church feels the heat over Proposition 8
- A federal bailout for Prop. 8
- How does CBS spell success? 'NCIS'
- Memory loss: What's normal? What's not?
- Older adults' sexual desires don't have to fade
- Report to Congress: Gulf War syndrome is real
- Automakers' pain felt far beyond Detroit
- After more than 400 lawsuits, disabled man can sue no more
- Randy Couture says fight against Brock Lesnar was stopped fairly
- Lakers face test from another rugged East team, the Bulls
- Eagles' McNabb is more than his gaffe about tie-game rule
- Democrats propose $25 billion in loans for carmakers
- Ethanol's troubles have sapped the dreams of an Indiana town
- Fox won't match ESPN offer on BCS games
- CSU may cut future enrollment by 10,000
- How Paramount let 'Twilight' get away
- Democrats' resentment against Lieberman cools
