Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Boeing laptop stolen -- 382,000
IDs lost
Past and present employees at risk
of being targeted
A laptop with personal information
on hundreds of thousands of Boeing
Co. employees was stolen earlier
this month, and the aerospace
company will inform those
potentially affected by the theft in
a company e-mail today.
"In the first week of December, a
laptop was stolen from an employee's
car," Boeing spokeswoman Kelly
Danaghy said. "That laptop had files
that contained Social Security
numbers for about 382,000 past and
present employees, and in most cases
it also included a home address,
phone number and date of birth."
There was no reason to believe that
any of the stolen information has
been used illegally, she said.
It was unclear Tuesday whether the
data was encrypted. No banking or
credit card information was stored
in those files, but the company will
provide free three-year credit
monitoring for employees whose
personal information was
compromised.
The company employs about 156,000
people, with 68,000 of those
employed in Washington state.
Past employees whose information was
stored in the files will be notified
of the theft by mail this week,
Danaghy said.
Boeing does not want to reveal what
city the theft occurred in because
the person who took the computer
might not realize what he or she
has. But Danaghy said the computer
contained information about
employees at all Boeing plants.
This isn't the first time the theft
of a laptop has compromised security
for Boeing employees.
In April, the personal information
of about 3,600 employees was
compromised when a laptop was taken
from a Boeing human resources
employee at an airport. In November
2005, a similar theft put the
personal data of about 161,000
employees in jeopardy.
Last month, a Boeing online memo
warned that another computer with
"old, unencrypted salary planning
files containing personally
identifiable information on 762
individuals" had been taken from an
employee's home. "This incident
underscores the importance for all
Boeing employees to either use
encryption or rid their computers of
old, unused files, particularly
those containing personally
identifiable information," Boeing
said in the memo.
In reports about previous thefts,
the company has said it has more
than 75,000 laptops, and that about
250 were stolen last year.
"We want to make sure that
(employees are) as protected as
possible," Danaghy said. "As a
company, we're also taking
preventive steps."
Even before the latest laptop theft,
Boeing was planning to implement a
policy that all company computers
have encryption software installed
on them, Danaghy said. The company
also is looking at finding a way to
identify employees other than by
using their Social Security numbers.
Danaghy declined to reveal what
agency is investigating the theft,
but she said a law enforcement
agency is working closely with
Boeing's security staff to recover
the computer.
back to top