http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=165701015

Iron Mountain Loses More Tapes July 8, 2005

 
Backup tapes from City National Bank were lost in April, but there's no
evidence the data has been compromised, the bank says.
By Steven Marlin 
InformationWeek 

City National Bank has become the second company in two months to
experience a loss of backup tapes in transit by Iron Mountain Inc. The Los
Angeles-based bank disclosed Thursday that two tapes containing sensitive
data, including Social Security numbers, account numbers, and other
customer information, were lost during transport to a secure storage
facility. 
The bank said the data was formatted to make the tapes difficult to read
without highly specialized skills, but declines to say if they were
encrypted. It said there's no evidence that data on the tapes has been
compromised or misused.

Iron Mountain said it lost the tapes in April. The tapes were in a small
container of backup tapes belonging to a Texas-based Internet services
provider that hosts applications for City National and other banks. The
incident has been investigated by federal law-enforcement officials and no
evidence has been found of identity-theft relating to the loss.

In May, Time Warner revealed that tapes containing data, including names
and Social Security numbers, on 600,000 current and former employees
disappeared in March while being shipped to an offsite storage facility
operated by Iron Mountain.

Other lost-tape incidents that have made headlines this year have involved
Bank of America, Citigroup, and Ameritrade.

In a letter to customers, City National said it was conducting a
comprehensive review of its security procedures. "Clearly, information
security is a growing concern throughout business everywhere," the letter
said. 

Iron Mountain, in a statement, said, "Given the criticality of disaster
recovery and the need for privacy protection, we continue to recommend that
companies encrypt back-up tapes that contain personal information."

Under California's Security Breach Notification law, companies are required
to provide notice of a breach in the security of data to any resident of
California whose unencrypted personal information was, or is reasonably
believed to have been, acquired by an unauthorized person. In providing
notification, City National did "more than was required" on behalf of our
clients, a spokeswoman says.

A bill introduced last month in Congress would require such notification,
but exempts companies if a risk assessment conducted with law enforcement
determines that the risk of fraud is minimal. It also exempts companies if
compromised data can't be used to commit fraud or if the company has a
security program reasonably designed to block the data's use for fraudulent
transactions. 

Only 7% of businesses encrypt all backup tapes, according to Enterprise
Strategy Group. Alternatives to backup tapes, such as electronic disk
backups, are being used by many companies; Citigroup is starting to use it
this month following its tape-loss incident.

AmeriVault Corp., a provider of disk-based backup systems, is recommending
that customers prioritize applications for backup purposes and designate
the most critical ones for disk backup and less-critical ones for tape.
"You don't need to rely on one solution," says AmeriVault president and CEO
Bud Stoddard. Prioritization, he says, "allows you to protect 10% to 20% of
your data electronically instead of relying on trucks and tapes."
 




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