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Friday, February 26, 2010

3 Homeland Security Computers Lost Every Day


Federal documents obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request reveal that two divisions of the Department of Homeland Security – charged with assuring the integrity of U.S. borders and the safety of residents – lost nearly three computers every day for a year.

But an official statement assures citizens that no "sensitive" data was lost.

A report on the computers, which were designated as "lost" or "not found during physical inventory," was issued by the Independence Institute in Golden, Colo., after it obtained the federal paperwork.

Federal agencies also "lost" several computer switches valued at some $90,000 apiece and a multitude of vehicles, including a truck worth about $116,000.

But Jon Caldara, president of the institute, said the absence of documentation about the information on the missing computers is what is most alarming.

"You can't lose thousands upon thousands of computers and make a blanket statement there was nothing of value on any of them. The fact that they're gone means you can't make that statement," he told WND.

Here's more

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Our grateful gov employees hard at work as usual.........better check ebay

Anonymous said...

This is obviously criminal activity.

Anonymous said...

In David Scott’s words, everyone needs to be a mini-Security Officer in the modern organization today. I think Mr. Scott is right: Most individuals and organizations enjoy Security largely as a matter of luck. Anyone else here reading I.T. WARS? I had to read parts of this book as part of my employee orientation at a new job. I'm not providing a commercial endorsement - you can glean a lot of good ideas from Google Books for this title. The book talks about a whole new culture as being necessary – an eCulture – for a true understanding of security, being that most security breaches are due to simple human errors and oversight. It has great chapters on security, as well as risk, content management, project management, acceptable use, various plans and policies, and so on. Just Google IT WARS – check out a couple links down and read the interview with the author David Scott at Boston’s Business Forum. (Full title is I.T. WARS: Managing the Business-Technology Weave in the New Millennium).

smitty240 said...

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2010-02-17-lost-guns_N.htm

But yet we citizens aren't permitted in some states (MD?) to carry.

Anonymous said...

Homeland security is a joke.
Job security for the cia and others of the like.
Really what a joke.'
Dont tell me they keep me safe at night.
Bull----