Wednesday, April 04, 2007

UCSF Reports Possible Compromise in Computer Security

Via The University of California, San Francisco.

UCSF is notifying students, faculty, and staff that their personal information may have been accessed by an unauthorized party due to a possible compromise in security of a computer server. The server did not contain any patient names or patient information.

There is no evidence at this time that any specific information was accessed, according to Randy Lopez, co-chief information officer for the Office of Academic and Administration Information Systems.

As a precautionary measure, the University is contacting about 46,000 individuals to alert them to look for signs of identity theft and advise them of steps to protect personal information. The contact list is comprised of students, faculty, and staff associated with UCSF or UCSF Medical Center over the past two years.

Data on the server included names, social security numbers, and bank account numbers used for electronic payroll and reimbursement deposits. The server resides in the UC System-wide data center. The incident was identified in late March, and the server was immediately taken off-line.

More here.

(Props, the Data Loss Mailing List.)

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