August 1st, 2006

You are currently browsing the articles from numbrX Security Beat written on August 1st, 2006.

U.S. Bank Exposes Customers to Identity Theft

Personal information of an unidentified number of U.S. Bank customers have been stolen from an employee’s car in Covington, KY. The information was stored in a briefcase that was left in the backseat of an unoccupied car.

Bank spokesman Steve Dale said the names, phone numbers and Social Security numbers of a “very small” number of customers were in the briefcase that was stolen in Covington from the employee’s car.

He would not divulge the number of customers, the exact location of the theft or the date of the theft.

The bank is offering to pay up to a year’s subscription to Privacy Guard to help customers monitor their credit reports. The bank is also helping the customers call the major credit bureaus to place fraud alerts on their files.

Source: The Cincinnati Post Thanks Patricia for the news tip!

Written by MCruz on August 1st, 2006 with no comments.
Read more articles on Banks and Customers and Identity Theft.

Cal Poly Students’ Data Exposed

Notification letters have been sent to 3,020 current and former Cal Poly students in mid-July. They were being informed that their names and Social Security numbers were stored on a physics professor’s laptop which was stolen from his San Luis Obispo home early last month.

The informational letter, which Cal Poly is required under state law to distribute to those affected, went to students who took the physics and astronomy lectures taught by physics professor John Mottman from 1994 to 2004.


What to do?

University officials urge affected students to place fraud alerts with one of the credit reporting agencies. Anyone with questions are encouraged to contact the school at 805-756-2226 or 805-756-2171. A copy of the notification letter can be found here.
Cal Poly Notification Letter

Source: The Tribune Sanluisobispo.com

Written by MCruz on August 1st, 2006 with no comments.
Read more articles on Identity Theft and Students and Universities.