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The Ugliness of Privacy Notices
ComputerWorld wrote: "August 16, 2006 (Computerworld) -- Loss of confidential data -- including intellectual property, business documents, customer data and employee records -- is a pervasive problem among U.S. companies, according to a survey released yesterday by Ponemon Institute LLC and Vontu Inc., a San Francisco-based provider of data loss prevention products." ... "Eighty-one percent of companies surveyed reported the loss of one or more laptops containing sensitive information during the past 12 months, according to the survey, which queried nearly 500 information security professionals."
ComputerWorld wrote: "May 18, 2007 (IDG News Service) -- A CD containing personal information about thousands of Alcatel-Lucent SA employees and their dependents has been lost or stolen, the company said on Thursday.
The disk contains the names, addresses, Social Security numbers, dates of birth and salary information for U.S. employees who worked for Lucent prior to its merger with Alcatel SA, as well as Lucent retirees and dependents of both groups, the company said."
Ferris Research writes: "There have recently been some well-publicized cases of employees losing their laptops, where of course the laptops weren’t encrypted. For example the recent theft of a laptop from UC Berkley that compromised the personal information of nearly 100,000 almuni � or two laptops stolen from a medical group that contained information on nearly twice that many patients."
I'd hate to see Morality in Media's actions cause airlines to only offer censored versions of films through the personal systems.