 |
|
|
GE Money representatives officially
announced on Friday that a backup tape containing the personal data of 650,000
customers has been reported missing since October2007 from an Iron Mountain
storage facility. According to Iron Mountain representatives, no personal data appears
to have been compromised so far, and this could just be a case of misplacement.
An Iron Mountain statement says:
“We believe this is an unfortunate case of misplaced tape; there has been no
evidence to suggest that the media was obtained by unauthorized persons or has
been misused in any way. We also understand the tape was created in such a
manner to make unauthorized access extremely unlikely and difficult, even for
experts with specialized knowledge and technology.”
Well, now we can certainly rest
assured no data has been compromised… However, in the light of the events,
Richard Jones, spokesman for the General Electric Co unit said the consumers
have been notified by letter of the situation and the individuals whose Social
Security numbers were on the tape will be provided with a 12-month free credit monitoring
service.
Iron Mountain discharges the
identity theft as a problem: “it is distinctly different from previous cases of
malicious hacking or PC theft. Since we notified GE Money of the missing backup
tape in October, there has been no evidence to suggest that any person’s
identity has been compromised as a result. And we don’t know of any incident,
ever, when a lost backup tape has resulted in identity theft.”
In the meantime, 230 national
retailers have been affected by the “misplacement”, including J.C. Penney Co.,
and wait for the situation to be solved. If the tape falls into the wrong
hands, the Social Security numbers could be used to create false credit-card
accounts, in other words, the situation could fall into identity theft, but for
the time being, officials say there is nothing to worry about.
© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia