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follow-up: VA sets aside $20 million to handle latest data breach
From: security curmudgeon <jericho () attrition org>
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 07:04:42 +0000 (UTC)
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: InfoSec News <alerts () infosecnews org> http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=37191 By Daniel Pulliam govexec.com June 14, 2007 The Veterans Affairs Department has set aside more than $20 million to respond to its latest data breach, the agency's top technology officer said Thursday. The department does not expect to spend the full $20 million, but designated that much because the breach potentially puts the identities of nearly a million physicians and VA patients at risk, said Bob Howard, the department's chief information officer. Howard spoke at The E-Gov Institute's Government Health IT Conference and Exhibition in Washington. "We have no evidence that [information is at risk]. None whatsoever, but we don't take the chance," Howard said. "The attitude of the VA right now is if we think we've put anybody's information at risk, then we need to step up to the plate and try to remedy that." The breach occurred in January, when a hard drive went missing from a Birmingham, Ala., VA medical research facility. The drive contained highly sensitive information on nearly all U.S. physicians and medical data for more than a half million VA patients. Any physician who billed Medicaid and Medicare through 2004 could be affected. The hard drive has not been recovered. The VA estimates that about half of the 1.3 million doctors whose information was on the hard drive, and 254,000 veterans, are potentially at risk. This group was notified by mail at the end of May. The letters noted that VA is providing credit monitoring services through a General Services Administration blanket purchase agreement from the multiple award schedules program. [..] _______________________________________________ Dataloss Mailing List (dataloss () attrition org) http://attrition.org/dataloss Tracking more than 209 million compromised records in 700 incidents over 7 years.
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