Monday, March 19, 2007

Personal Data Security Breaches Spreadsheet

Some stats try to emphasize on the number of people affected while forgetting the key points I outlined in a previous post related to why we cannot measure the real cost of cybercrime, and yes, duplicates among the affected people in any of the statistics available. The number of people affected will continue to rise, but that's not important, what's important is to identify the weakest link in this process, and for the time being, you're a "data hostage" in order to enjoy your modern lifestyle -- ever asked yourself what's gonna happen with your digital data after you're gone?

Spreadsheet nerds, here's something worth taking the time to around with, most importantly this huge dataset debunks the common myth of hackers taking the credit for the majority of personal data security breaches, whereas as you can see in the figures, on the majority of occasions -- and it's an ongoing trend -- companies themselves should get into the spotlight :

"On average, in 2005 personal records were compromised at a rate of 5.2 million a month. On average, in 2005 personal records were compromised at a rate of 5.8 million a month. Assuming a similar rate of growth, by November or December this year we we should cross the 2.0 billion mark. This is a conservative estimate because many of the news stories we archived were conservative on their own estimates of how many records were lost in particular incidents, and because a small number of incidents are reported without details of how many personal records were compromised.

View figures and tables of this paper as a *.pdf. View pre-publication draft of paper as a *.pdf. View dataset of incidents as a *.xls. View University of Washington Press office news release on this research."

Graphic presenting the risk of identity theft in the U.S only, based on the severity of data breaches, courtesy of the Danny Dougherty.

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