GoBigEd

Sunday, March 25, 2007


A MUST FOR NEBRASKA:
ROLLBACK ON STUDENT DATA COLLECTION SYSTEM
WITH IMMEDIATE OPT-OUT PROVISION

Ooh. Ooh. Ooooooh. We need to slam the brakes on the State Education Department's massive electronic recordkeeping project, or we are going to be in a world of hurt.

Let's call for an immediate end to the project, and in the meantime, at a bare minimum, allow parents to opt their children's data OUT of this system if they choose, to protect themselves from the illegitimate hacking that's so rampant. Look at this horrible case out of California with mentions of past abuses in Ohio and Nebraska among other places. It's not even so much the hacking as it is the government-sponsored, disturbing, disgraceful invasions of privacy that will be going on constantly, at taxpayer expense, unless we put a stop to it.

According to the Associated Press:

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

LOS ANGELES. — The
University of California, Los Angeles alerted about 800,000 current and former students, faculty and staff on Tuesday that their names and certain personal information were exposed after a hacker broke into a campus computer system.

Only a small percentage — "far less than 5 percent" — of the records in the database were actually accessed, UCLA spokesman Jim Davis told The Associated Press.

Still, it was one of the largest such breaches involving a U.S. higher education institution.
The attacks in October 2005 and ended Nov. 21 of this year, when
computer security technicians noticed suspicious database queries, according to a statement posted on a school Web site set up to answer questions about the theft.

Davis said the hacker used a program designed to exploit an undetected software flaw to bypass security and get into the restricted database, which has information on current and former students, faculty and staff, and some student applicants and parents of students or applicants who applied for financial aid.

Many of the records in the database do not link names and
Social Security numbers, however, the two pieces of information the hacker was after, Davis said.

The university's investigation so far shows only that the hacker sought and obtained some of the Social Security numbers. Out of caution, the school said, it was contacting everyone listed in the database.

About 3,200 of those being notified are current or former staff and faculty of UC Merced and current or former employees of the
University of California Office of the President, for which UCLA does administrative processing.

Acting Chancellor Norman Abrams said in a letter posted on the site that while the database includes Social Security numbers, home addresses and birth dates, there was no evidence any data have been misused.

The letter suggests, however, that recipients contact credit reporting agencies and take steps to minimize the risk of potential
identity theft. The database does not include driver's license numbers or credit card or banking information.

"We have a responsibility to safeguard personal information, an obligation that we take very seriously," Abrams wrote. "I deeply regret any concern or inconvenience this incident may cause you."

The breach is among the latest involving universities, financial institutions, private companies and government agencies. A stolen Veterans Affairs laptop contained information on 26.5 million veterans, and a hacker into the Nebraska child-support computer system may have gotten data on 300,000 people and 9,000 employers.

Security experts said the UCLA breach, in the sheer number of people affected, appeared to be among the largest at an American college or university.

"To my knowledge, it's absolutely one of the largest," Rodney Petersen, security task force coordinator for Educause, a nonprofit higher education association, told the Los Angeles Times.
Petersen said that in a Educause survey released in October, about a quarter of 400 colleges said that they had experienced a security incident in which confidential information was compromised during the previous 12 months, the newspaper reported.

In 2005, a database at the
University of Southern California was hacked, exposing the records of 270,000 individuals.

This spring, Ohio University announced the first of what would be identified as five cases of data theft, affecting thousands of students, alumni and employees — including the president. About 173,000 Social Security numbers may have been stolen since March 2005, along with names, birth dates, medical records and home addresses.

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