Protecting your Laptop Data

I ran across this article recently on some of the forums I subscribe to. It might be food for thought if you travel internationally. 

To Your Success, 

 Tim 

 

How to Secure Laptops from U.S. Government's Prying Eyes 

By Jack E. Gold 2008-11-07 

The U.S. government has recently been given full permission to check the contents of laptops and mobile devices belonging to travelers passing into the United States at border control checkpoints. Enterprises with international travelers should take immediate steps to safeguard the sensitive corporate data that exists on their executives' laptops and mobile devices. Knowledge Center contributor Jack E. Gold explains the steps you must take to ensure that your company's mission-critical data is protected from prying eyes. 

On April 21, 2008, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals essentially gave the U.S. government carte blanche permission to check any and every piece of data on laptops belonging to travelers passing into the United States at border control checkpoints. 

In its decision, the court stated that they “are satisfied that reasonable suspicion is not needed for customs officials to search a laptop or other personal electronic storage devices at the border.” This decision also allows the U.S. government to confiscate the laptop for an unlimited period of time, and with no recourse for the owner of the device. Most business laptop owners have nearly everything about themselves stored on their hard drives, including financial information, pictures, e-mails from a variety of sources, and, of course, work-related sensitive information. 

 Encrypt and back up 

This case highlights the need for every enterprise--and any individual who travels internationally--to take immediate steps. The typical password log-in protection is not sufficient to mitigate this risk. Enterprises should require that all users have their hard drives encrypted. Further, it is imperative that a backup of the data on the drive be made and left in a safe place. This should be done in case the U.S. government decides to confiscate the user’s machine (although this is an unlikely scenario, it is nevertheless possible). Typically, 50 to 75 percent of critical business information is stored on user PCs, and it is often never backed up. So, if an executive’s machine is confiscated, the potential for disruption is alarming. 

 Use laptop security suites, file backup and employee awareness 

Any company with international travelers should initiate the following three precautionary steps immediately: 

Precautionary Step No. 1: If there isn’t a laptop security suite already in place, companies should deploy one. There are suites available such as Sybase Afaria, Credant, Trust Digital, PGP, RSA and Utimaco. Using this technology, companies should enable a secure storage capability on each device by turning on and maintaining file encryption. It usually isn’t desirable to do whole disk encryption (available within Windows XP and Vista), as this could cause performance issues. But specific files of sensitive information should be selectively encrypted. 

Precautionary Step No. 2: Next, make sure that all data files on each laptop are backed up to a server or to a portable hard drive provided to the end user. Then follow up with appropriate “nagging” to make sure the user performs the backup regularly. Automated tools are available to accomplish this at a reasonable cost, and often within the same security suite deployed for encryption. 

Precautionary Step No. 3: Finally, inform every business traveler of the new rules, and make sure they understand that the new security regimen is not optional. 

Re-evaluate lax laptop security attitudes 

It is estimated that 75 percent or more of corporate laptops go unprotected (except for the use of passwords). This is despite the risks inherent in losing or having the laptop stolen, and with the risk of the consequent data loss. This action by the U.S. government should finally force the majority of companies to re-evaluate their lax attitude toward laptop security, and provide a robust and secure environment for their users. 

Know the ruling also applies to all mobile devices 

This ruling does not only apply to laptops. Smart phones, including RIM’s BlackBerry, are also included in the powers of review and seizure. Companies should take all necessary steps to secure them as well. Users of many wireless e-mail solutions (such as BlackBerry, Good, Sybase and MSFT Direct Push) already have higher levels of built-in security than the majority of users with enterprise-deployed laptops. Many of the wireless devices already include the ability to do a remote wipe of the device, which many security suites also enable.

 Although the risk to individuals of data snooping or laptop loss because of this government ruling is minimal, it nevertheless does represent a real threat--especially in regulated industries such as finance and health care. Further, the risk is disproportionately higher for upper management, since many of a company’s highest-level executives regularly engage in international travel while carrying highly sensitive corporate data. 

Protect all mission-critical data 

Although we hope sanity returns and Congress acts against this unprecedented invasion of privacy, we do not believe that this is a near-term likelihood. Therefore, each company with users who travel with their laptops must go into defensive mode and make sure all mission-critical data is protected. This can be done through the proper deployment of security and backup technology. Failure to act may cause the loss of sensitive information and potentially result in substantial harm to the company from confidential data being publicly disclosed. 

Jack E. Gold is the founder and principal analyst at J. Gold Associates. He is a former vice president of Research Services at the META Group. He has over 35 years experience in the computer and electronics industries.

So You Want Out of Your Sprint Contract?

So you want out of your Sprint contract and you don't want to pay the early termination fee? Well, I ran across a post on how to get out of your contract now without paying the fee. It seems Sprint has added a 99 cent administrative fee increase per line will give you the ammo you need to say goodbye. 

Read all the details here. Just in time for Christmas. Now you can use the money you saved to buy that special someone a gift! 

 To Your Success, 

 Tim

Dramatic Drop in Spam?

According to some Internet news reports, McColo Corp., located in downton San Jose, California was shut down a few weeks ago when its two Internet backbone providers finally shut off their Internet backbone connection. McColo is a web hosting provider for many international organizations involved in spamming of everything from pornography to pharmaceuticals. 

The two backbone providers are Global Crossing and Hurricane Electric. It's unclear if the FBI will be pursuing charges against McColo for being partially responsible for the billions of spam messages sent. 

Reports from various Internet security agencies reported varying degrees of a drop in spam. One report showed an immediate 66% drop in unsolicited commercial email (UCE) and another report showed a decline from 40 spam messages/second down to 10/second. 

No matter what the decline actually was, any decline is good news. It's about time. 

To Your Success, 

 Tim

Finally, A Faster USB!

Finally, A Faster USB! For the first time in over 8 years, Universal Serial Bus, or USB for short, is finally getting an upgrade. The non-profit group formed by various manufacturers to set the standard is scheduled to announce the new USB 3.0 standard. 

The difference? About 10 times the speed. The new USB 3.0 standard supports a 10 fold increase in data transfer speeds versus its cousin, USB 2.0. In fact, that's faster than firewire, and could signal the beginning of the end to te firewire standard. USB truly started the plug and play revolution, and has been more widely accepted by computer users than firewire. 

How does this play into your business? Well, your employees won't be sitting around waiting on files to transfer to thumb drives. Which means increased employee productivity. For those of you who utilize external hard drives for backups of server data, now the backups will take considerably less time. This translates into a better chance of having a valid backup since it won't take all night to backup your company data. 

This, is truly good news for the computing industry. 

 To Your Success, 

 Tim

In Case You Were Thinking About a Blackberry

I ran across this article on one of the blogs I frequent. This study tracked specific cell phone models for a year. The results are, well, let's just say I'm glad I didn't get a Blackberry. 

To Your Sucess, 

 Tim

Research group SquareTrade recently released the results of a massive cellphone study. They tracked 15,000 individual handsets over their first year of use, and they found some large discrepancies in reliability. The iPhone malfunction rate sat at a comfortable 5.6%. The Blackberry (in its various incarnations) jumped to 11.9%. But it's all better than the Palm Treo, which malfunctioned 16.2% of the time within the first year.
To be honest, none of these numbers are particularly good, and I have a feeling that there may be a confounding iPhone White Glove Effect—I keep that phone's glass screen in mind every time I put it in the pocket opposite my keys. (Ironically, iPhone users were found 3% more likely to accidentally damage their phones than their Blackberry/Palm counterparts.)
When projected to two years, the iPhone's failure rate jumps to 11% while Blackberries level to 14% and Treos reach a scary 21%. I guess it's a good thing we have those ridiculously binding contracts to bail us out after all. [SquareTrade via CNET]