In which I remind you to protect your data!

A co-worker just told me a story: While sitting in a restaurant with his wife over the weekend, his car was broken into. The thief got, among other things, his wife’s laptop, and on that laptop was a spreadsheet – unencrypted – containing their full names, SSNs, dates of birth, credit card numbers, the codes and online logins for all their credit cards, and all their account information. Their kids’ information – full names, SSNs, DOBs – was also included.

They drove like bats out of hell to a nearby rest stop, got on wi-fi with his laptop, and canceled all their accounts. But everything the thief would need to perform full-on identity theft for four people was in that spreadsheet.

The moral is this: don’t keep mission critical crap in unencrypted format on a portable machine! And if you must use a password database (which you should, since all of your online accounts should have different passwords), use an encrypted application and protect access to it with a very strong password — one with capped and lower-case alpha characters and numbers and special characters.

On the same co-worker’s advice, I use KeePass for all my secure information, and I keep it on a thumb drive. Once in a great while I print a hard copy and file it, but I don’t keep the info on my laptop.

Be safe, my babies. Because you really don’t want to spend an entire weekend – or two, or more – closing accounts, buying SSN protection, and then being financially crippled until your new checks and credit cards arrive.

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4 Responses to PSA: Data Safety

  1. Jim@HiTek says:

    And another thing…don’t be fooled into thinking that you can just use the password you installed on any Windows product to help you. You know the one, you buy a computer, take it home and turn it on and it asks you to install a password. If you’re smart, you did. That will slow down your run of the mill computer thief by a day or two, but not a hacker.

    Also know that people like me have a CD that will reset all the Windows passwords to null in 30 seconds. And I’m just slightly more clever then your average user.

    Word from here? Don’t put ANY personal info on a computer or leave it there for very long.

  2. Mush says:

    Yeah, or you can just put in a Linux boot disc and have access to the Windows pwd file in seconds.

  3. Brad says:

    You’re the best for giving me the heads-up on all the wonderful open source stuff. I was googling for something very similar to this just the other day.

    I just be luvin’ yew.

    I just be luvin’ yew too! -m

  4. Louise says:

    Great advice for a very real problem. I work for PassPack which is an online password manager. It’s always a good idea to use a password manager whether you use an online or offline one:

    http://tinyurl.com/3ba3et

    Louise

    Sweet, I’ll not only check it out, I’ll even approve your comment! -m