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Data Theft at the VA
Follow the latest developments in the Veteran Data Theft saga.
By Paul Kerstein
June 22, 2006 — CSO —
Early in May, personal records for roughly 26.5 million veterans, stored in a laptop computer, were stolen from the home of a data analyst working for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Yet the VA took almost three weeks to disclose that the theft ever happened. Government officials and veterans organizations are in an uproar that a breach of this magnitude, said to be the largest in U.S. history, was even possible. In the aftermath and following investigations, there have been resignations, firings and a wholesale rethinking of how the government and private agencies should be protecting personal information.
Follow the events here, as they happen.
Recent News:
VA: All Dept. Computers to Get Security Boost - Posted August 14, 2006
Another PC with Veterans’ Information is Missing - Posted August 8, 2006
Two Charged in VA Laptop Theft - Posted August 7, 2006
VA’s General Counsel Resigns - Posted July 21,
Bush Administration Cancels Free Credit Monitoring for Veterans - Posted July 18, 2006
VA, USDA Report No Loss of Data from Breaches - Posted July 18, 2006
Report: VA Responded to Data Theft with Indifference - Posted July 12, 2006
VA’s CIO Now Has InfoSec Authority - Posted July 6, 2006
VA Chief Information Security Officer Resigns - Posted June 30, 2006
Two Other Data Breaches at VA - Posted June 30, 2006
Stolen VA Laptop Recovered - Posted June 29, 2006
Judge Bars VA from Publicizing Credit Monitoring - Posted June 26, 2006
Lawmaker: VA’s Credit Monitoring Offer Not Enough - Posted June 22, 2006
Virginia VA Bars Home Use of Its Laptops - Posted June 22, 2006
VA Offers Free Credit Monitoring to Vets - Posted June 21, 2006
GAO: More Leadership and Security Needed at VA - Posted June 20, 2006
House Panel: VA Ignored Cybersecurity Warnings - Posted June 14, 2006
Business Bureau Establishes Site for Veterans - Posted June 13, 2006
VA Chief Calls for Stronger Data Laws - Posted June 9, 2006
Letters Sent to Veterans at Risk of Data Theft - Posted June 8, 2006
VA Data Theft Affects 2.2M Active-Duty Troops - Posted June 7, 2006
Veterans Groups Sue Over VA Data Theft - Posted June 6, 2006
VA Data Loss Could Prompt US Federal Privacy Law - Posted June 6, 2006
Active Military IDs Among Stolen VA Data - Posted June 5, 2006
Connecticut Proactive in Helping Veterans After Data Theft - Posted June 2, 2006
Stolen VA Data in Unusual Format - Posted June 1, 2006
VA Names New Security Adviser in Wake of Data Theft - Posted June 1, 2006
Stolen VA Data More than Originally Reported - Posted June 1, 2006
VA Official Resigns Due to Data Theft - Posted May 31, 2006
VA Data Theft Could Cost Taxpayers $500M - Posted May 25, 2006
VA Chief Promises Accountability for ID Theft - Posted May 25, 2006
Data Security Becoming Political Issue - Posted May 24, 2006
Gov’t Source: Vet Data Theft Kept Quiet for Nearly 3 Weeks - Posted May 23, 2006
Data on 26.5M Veterans Stolen from VA Staffer’s Home - Posted May 22, 2006
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