Posts Tagged ‘Computer’

This is so irresponsible – DO NOT get taken in by all the look alikes that WILL follow and WILL be a scam

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

The Honest $10000 SPAM  – http://digg.com/d21DcVM?t4

This is very irresponsible – I don’t care if the end result is that the money went to a good cause.

Now that these idiots have pulled this stunt I wonder how many people are going to be, as they said in the video, “stupid enough” to reply to the billions of scam emails that are already circulated in the hopes they’ll find the “real” one.

Let’s forget all the people that don’t realize (somehow) that the run of the mill emails like this are all scam and fraud – we now have had an actual event; people are going to believe they have lottery like luck to find the one real email from all the spam.

So irresponsible as far as I am concerned as now the scammers and spammers have a video to link to and a whole new campaign to use to encourage people to part with their sensitive information.

If you part with your full name and all the details to your personal information (bank, credit card, etc) you run an astronomically high probability to lose money over the infinitesimal chance to get free money.

Don’t do it.

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MY TAKE – Laptop data theft a growing worry- LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Data theft – Published Tuesday December 22, 2009

Editor: This letter is in response to the laptop data theft story in Saturday’s paper (R-J, 12/19).

In 2007, a laptop was stolen from the front seat of a car belonging to an employee of the Department of Revenue Services which in­cluded the records of about 106,000 taxpayers including names, addresses and Social Security numbers.

So how is the issue with the laptop or technology itself?

Why was someone carry­ing around the information of 106,000 taxpayers to begin with?

There is no way in the reg­ular course of one individual’s job that they needed to carry around that much informa­tion with them on daily basis. I blame the end user for doing it and the ad­ministrator of the data for al­lowing that type of access.

Irresponsible users and ad­ministrators cause almost all data breaches of this sort where someone can lift up a com­puting device and walk away with it.

The encrypting file system of today’s operat­ing systems used in concert with the total drive encryption found in the BitLocker application prevents data recovery on stolen devices when the security measures are mandatorily used.

This can be enforced on portable devices using computer generated policies that are set by an administrator and cannot be altered by the end user.

I will encrypt a flash drive with EFS and BitLocker; I challenge anyone to hack the device and recover data from it.

When a thief steals a laptop secured with encryption all they can do is re-install the operating system and use or sell it – they will not get their hands on the data.

JASON ZANDRI, WALLINGFORD

Laptop data theft a growing worry

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

By Jason R. Vallee
Record-Journal staff
jvallee@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2225

As published in the Record Journal Saturday December 19, 2009

Follow all the news directly on the Record Journal Website for the most up to date information. www.myrecordjournal.com

Write a letter to the editor letters@record-journal.com

The Christmas and New Year’s holidays often involve travel and can require both government and private employees to work at home. As people consider travel­ing with their laptop computers to get that extra work done this holiday season, Connecticut At­torney General Richard Blumen­thal is warning employees to be vigilant and use safe practices to protect sensitive information.

Information theft can become a nightmare for both companies and their clients, Blumenthal said, and failure to protect infor­mation or respond to stolen in­formation can be a costly deci­sion.

“First and foremost, if there is any type of personal data breach, whether through a private com­pany or government entity, there is a legal obligation for the ser­vicer to contact both the authori­ties and the clients or consumers who may have been affected,” Blumenthal said.

That was why Blumenthal said he was upset when an investiga­tive report this month revealed that Health Net, which earlier this year admitted losing equip­ment containing sensitive per­sonal data about its insurance customers, had known about the breach for more than six months before reporting it and had lied about the equipment and infor­mation that had been stolen.

Once information is stolen, he said, companies should be ex­pected to report the theft within a reasonable amount of time — and Blumenthal defined that period as a few hours to a few days at most, not weeks or months. He said that clients must also be no­tified as quickly as possible.

Blumenthal has been working with the company to seek protec­tion for those who may have been affected, he said Friday.

For Connecticut residents, this was one of two incidents in the past two years that left people feeling victimized. On Long Is­land in 2007, a laptop com­puter was stolen from the front seat of a car belonging to an employee of the Department of Revenue Services.

Files on the laptop con­tained the records of about 106,000 taxpayers — including names, addresses and Social Security numbers.

Industry academics and ex­perts said it can be difficult to restore data or protect infor­mation once it is stolen. The best approach in protecting in­formation is to prevent prob­lems in the first place, they said.

“Stolen data is a nightmare. Once it happens, you are damned if you do and damned if you don’t,” said Erik Semmel, vice president of TAB Com­puter Systems and host of the radio program, “Computer Talk with TAB.” “The best way to protect your company is to let clients know, but at the same time talking about a theft has a negative effect on the company.”

Semmel and Bruce White, a professor of information sys­tems management at Quinnip­iac University, each said the best protection against infor­mation theft is to use encryp­tion codes to seal sensitive data. Encryption codes work by putting a wall around infor­mation; a code is required to unlock the information.

“It’s kind of like a pay-per-­view channel on cable televi­sion,” Semmel said. “The chan­nel is scrambled until the company enters a code. Only then can you watch the pro­gram.”

White added that the pass­words should be complicated and should never be written down or left in a place where they can be found easily. In ad­dition, he said, using a pass­word that includes capitaliza­tion and numbers can make it more difficult to decipher.

There are other tools that can help protect information, although they are less com­mon. White pointed to a pro­gram called Computrace Lo-Jack that, if installed, can allow authorities to trace a stolen laptop computer.

Another program available through several companies can be used to destroy any en­crypted data if a laptop is stolen, Semmel said. These systems send out a distress sig­nal through the Internet if au­thorities are alerted that a lap­top has been stolen and, once connected, they immediate erase the encrypted data. These systems are used most often with companies in the in­surance or medical fields, he said.

The two experts each said basic physical security, includ­ing locks, and removing lap­tops from public view can also be strong deterrents to theft.

Steve Montemurro, Meri­den’s director of management information systems, and Cheshire Town Manager Michael Milone each said his community has been fortunate not to have had information breaches.
Encryption plays a large role in the protective efforts of both communities, but in Meriden, where laptops are more prevalent among employees, there are also proto­cols in place to prevent items from being stolen.

Montemurro and City Man­ager Lawrence J. Kendzior each said employees are re­quired to seek permission when taking laptops from the office. Employees also are re­quired to use a lock and key to secure laptops when they are not being moved between lo­cations.

Both towns also require em­ployees to adhere to written codes of conduct that prevent personal use of the laptops and outline the approved uses for each employee. Milone said those who don’t obey receive strict disciplinary action.

“The severe sanctions in­cluded suspension or termina­tion,” he said. “It may seem ex­treme, but we have a responsibility to protect this information for our residents and it’s been an effective way to enforce the policy.”

Council meetings added to Web site – MERIDEN

Friday, August 7th, 2009

By Amanda Falcone
Record-Journal staff
afalcone@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2232

As published in the Record Journal on Friday August 7, 2009

Follow all the news directly on the Record Journal Website for the most up to date information. www.myrecordjournal.com

Write a letter to the editor letters@record-journal.com

MERIDEN – For those who can’t make it to City Council meetings, or who miss the meetings on cable TV, there is now another option.
People can watch council meetings on the city’s Web site, www.cityofmeriden.org.

The site now has a “Video on Demand” section that archives videos of council meetings. It is an attempt to make local government more accessible, said Steven Monte­murro, director of the city’s Management Information Sys­tems Department. Monte­murro said he decided to up­load videos of council meetings to the Web site after looking at other municipal Web sites and talking to oth­ers.

“We are always trying to im­prove our Web site,” Monte­murro explained. The city’s video archive goes back to the June 15 coun­cil meeting. Videos can be viewed in pieces. This will help someone who is looking to view a specific part of a meeting because they will not have to watch the whole thing, Montemurro said.

Clem Kasinskas, a Meriden videographer who owns On- Site Video Production Serv­ices, records the council meet­ings for the city, edits the video and provides Montemurro with a usable file. Montemurro then converts the video file to ensure that it is compatible with Earth Channel — the site that stores the files.

The city is spending about a $1,000 per year to use Earth Channel, Montemurro said.

It is also paying Kasinskas for his services and the use of his equipment. The city budg­ets $18,000 a year for video services, which include the council meetings and “The Mayor’s Mic.” He is also re­sponsible for making sure Channel 14, the local cable TV public access channel, is up and running around the clock.

Kasinskas’ pay comes from the library budget.

Kasinskas also records Board of Education meetings, but his compensation for those meetings comes from the school board’s budget. Glen Lamontagne, assistant super­intendent for finance and ad­ministration, said Kasinskas was paid $6,300 for his serv­ices in 2008-09.

The school board videos are not posted on the Internet, but can be view on Cox Communi­cations Channel 14.

As the “Video on Demand” section is being made avail­able, the city is working to make sure that AT&T U-verse costumers are not left out. To­day, council meetings can only be viewed on Cox Communi­cations Channel 14 and the In­ternet, but in about a month U­verse costumers will also be able to see the meetings.

Getting the council meet­ings on U-verse was a deal that first began with Council Ma­jority Leader Keith Gordon. Gordon said he met a U-Verse executive at a Greater Meriden Chamber of Commerce Busi­ness After Hours and started the conversation.

Putting the videos on the In­ternet and U-verse are ways to expand access, Gordon said, noting that he supports the ef­fort.

Can’t beat the price of schools’ Web upgrade

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

By Richie Rathsack
Record-Journal staff
rrathsack@record-journal.com   
(203) 317-2227

SOUTHINGTON— When parents visit the school sys­tem’s Web site, they are greeted with a text-heavy page with so many links that it can be confusing to navigate. By the time students return to school in the fall, the adminis­tration hopes to unveil a more user-friendly site Technology Director Karen Veilleux said a Web site re­vamp has been pondered for a while. School Superintendent Joseph V. Erardi said the price for the design — nothing — played a big factor in decision to move forward with the proj­ect.

“We’re looking to enhance the public school Web page and make it much more inter­active and hands-on,” Erardi said. “The price was certainly right. We are able to get all this work done at no cost.”

Jeff Munk, father of Southington High School teacher Allison Gamzon, has volunteered his time and ex­pertise to help with the design portion of the Web site, while technology department staffers, such as Lura Terrace, are busy working on the con­tent sections.

“I don’t know exactly how it developed,” Munk said. Gam­zon “might have mentioned that I am an art director and I design stuff. Web sites, I do as freelance work. Lura contacted me and we started talking about all this. I thought ‘Since it is for education and given the economy, I can’t possibly charge you for this.’ ” Munk is art director at Conair Corp. in Stamford, de­signing packaging and advertisements. He said he does Web design and interactive work on the side from his home in Trumbull.

One of the problems with the current school Web site is its text-heavy nature, Erardi said. The redesign will include an introductory portal page with streamlined links to get people to the information they are looking for more quickly, Veilleux said.

“I think the existing site, if you struggle with the Web or if you are not there often, at times it is problematic and cumbersome. This will be a much easier opportunity for parents to find exactly what they are looking for,” Erardi said. “I’m thrilled about it. The first impression is a lasting one. I want them to feel the district is cutting edge and that we have embraced technol­ogy.”

On the main page of the cur­rent Web site, there are 10 text links below the banner and heavy text content underneath them. There is only one small image, an image of a town school that changes every few seconds as part of a slide show. The new page will have six button-style links at the top to direct visitors to subpages for the categories of the site, large photographs of in-school scenes and four text links at the bottom of the page. The six button links will feature drop­down menus to offer visitors a route to many other pages from one main page.

Beyond the home page, Munk said, he also designed a new banner for the top of all the other pages. The banner will look similar to the main page, with the same links and two pictures that blend to­gether as one large image that spans across the banner.

The banner will be featured throughout all district Web sites, including the schools’ Web pages.

“It’s not really a complete overhaul. We are redesigning it and moving pages. We are giv­ing it a new look and feel,” Veilleux said. “We are reorgan­izing our pages to be more consistent.”

Erardi said having an in­creased Web presence is be­coming more important for schools in such a technologi­cally advanced era. The new update will help reflect the dedication to technology.

He said the schools may re­quire teachers, as part of their contract, to maintain a basic personal Web site with details of their classes. The town is preparing to begin negotia­tions on a new contract with its teachers.

“If you are not on the cutting edge with technology, you are nowhere. It is for tomorrow’s generation. One of the back to­ school conversations with ad­ministrators is an expectation of a Web presence with all cre­dentialed staff. If there is a need for additional training, we will provide that,” Erardi said. “The easiest way for par­ents to communicate with staff is through an electronic medium.”

While talking about the Web site, Munk himself served as an example of the ease of com­munication through electronic media that Erardi envisions. Munk has never been to Southington to meet with dis­trict staff on the project. Everything has been done through email, phone calls or the Web.