According to the MD of the storage systems integration specialist, the laptop contained the details of children attending a local playgroup - data, the loss of which could have serious consequences if it leaked on to the Internet.
"The bad news about this case is that even though the 21-year-old boyfriend has been prosecuted for the theft, the laptop has never been recovered," he said.
"The chairperson of the playgroup has told reporters that the personal details on the children was not stored on the notebook, which will come as a tremendous relief for the parents of the kids attending the group," he added.
But, says Cordial, this relief will be tempered by the fact that the parent's financial information was stored on the laptop and is now `in the wild.'
Even if the hard drive of the notebook is reformatted, the data can still be retrieved by anyone with technical knowledge, he explained.
Our own observations at Origin Storage about stolen laptops, he went on to say, is that most thieves only attempt a cursory deletion of documents on the desktop before `fencing' it on.
More than anything, this sad petty theft case highlights the need for data to be encrypted on a laptop owned by almost anyone, he noted.
"The cost of a hard drive that encrypts data on-the-fly has fallen significantly in recent times, so there really isn't any excuse for not buying an encrypting hard drive," he said.
"Just imagine what would have happened if the women had stored her employer's client financial details on the laptop. Now there's a potential lesson for any IT manager," he added.
"In an attempt to do the famous 'Charm Thing' with a certain Bill Gates, Tony Blair “got all [his] terminology mixed up”. Whichever Oxbridge-educated candidate ends up heading [fill in appropriate temporal adjective] Labour come the end of September, let's hope they'll be worrying less about the right nomenclature for enterprise computing platforms and more about policies that might get some more wealth-creating industry back in the country.”
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Neal Perry, Country Manager UK, Ireland & Middle East, at EPiServer talks about how some of the UK's European partners are implementing social media to strengthen citizen engagement.
"Across the World, governments created groups to explore the problems and the potential for strengthening citizen participation in local government. They then reunited the ‘champions of participation’ from countries in every continent to identify lessons and how sharing this experience might inform and shape policy and practice. Social media is one tool where organisations can embrace such initiatives and is an especially effective one when it comes to engaging the younger public." Read more
Complete and enter our draw to win a free seat at the e-Government Awards. The public sector is already perceived to be lacking in innovation, but is that a fair assessment, and what role could it play in helping the government meet efficiency targets? What do people working on the frontline of ICT in public sector organisations think? Take part and share your views
Source: Gartner