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According to the CSI/FBI Survey, 50% of the
information security professionals cited corporate espionage
as a major motivating factor for corporate competitors. Next
to security breaches caused by malicious code often
used for corporate espionage is 'electronic scavenging'.
Electronic scavenging involves rummaging through disposed
magnetic media for retrieving sensitive data that is left
behind on it.
Results from an MIT study, which was published in the January/February
2003 issue of IEEE Security and Privacy, suggests that the
secondary market is awash with confidential information. More
than 150 million disk drives were retired from primary service
in 2002. The research indicates that computers, even those
with "erased" disk drives, might harbor confidential
information, such as Corporate Intellectual Property, credit
card numbers, medical records etc. which can be easily retrieved.
Scavenging through the data retrieved from 158 used and formatted
disk drives, the students at MIT's Laboratory for Computer
Science found more than 5,000 credit card numbers, detailed
personal and corporate financial records, numerous medical
records, gigabytes of personal email and pornography. Out
of the disk drives that were purchased for less than $1,000
from eBay and other sources of used computer hardware - only
12 were properly sanitized. On many disks, files that would
typically be found in the "My Documents" folder
had been deleted, but they could be recovered using a simple
"undelete" utility. Undelete programs work because
deleting a file does not actually overwrite the blocks on
the computer's disk that are used to hold the file's information.
Today, corporates discard many floppies every month. They
also upgrade a substantial portion of their PCs on an ongoing
schedule. The common procedure is that the vendor who supplies
the upgraded PC 'buys-back' the old one. Most corporates format
the hard disks on the old PCs prior to disposal. Some security
conscious corporates break the read-write head on the disk
drives. But these are ineffectual measures at best. Formatting
does not properly sanitize a disk. For instance, the Windows
"format" command doesn't actually overwrite every
block-the "format" command just reads every block
to make sure that they still work. To properly sanitize the
hard drive, you need to overwrite every block. Also, with
technologies such a Scanning Tunneling Microscopy one can
read information even from 'pieces' of the disk - what this
means is that even if you 'shred' your floppies or pulverize
your hard disks, there is a hole.
Corporates today can either incinerate their magnetic media,
grind them, use acid to burn them, or degauss them. Of these
measures 'degaussing' magnetic media prior to disposal is
a viable solution. Degaussing, completely and irretrievably,
erases the information stored on the magnetic surface.
Corporates must consider sanitization and secure disposal
of media as an important component of its overall risk management
strategy.
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