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Real World Problem Cases Caused By Missing Policies
At A Government Agency...
A clerk spent a great deal of time surfing the Internet while on
the job. Because there was no policy specifying what constituted
excessive personal use, management could not discipline this employee.
Then management discovered that the clerk had downloaded a great
deal of pornography. Using this as a reason, management fired him.
The clerk chose to appeal the termination with the Civil Service
Board, claiming that he couldn't be fired because he had never been
told that he couldn't download pornography. After a Civil Service
hearing, the Board ordered him to be reinstated with back pay.
At A Law Firm...
The manager of data processing took a job with a competing law firm.
Because his former employer had nobody who could do the job that
he did, they kept him on as a contractor. On a part-time basis,
he would perform systems management tasks. In order to do these
tasks he needed full privileges on the former employer's network.
One day the former employer learned that the manager's new employer
was opposing them in a high-visibility lawsuit. Could the former
data processing manager gain access to the shared legal strategy
files for this case on the network? The answer was yes, but nobody
knew whether the manager had exploited these capabilities because
no data access logs were being kept. This situation could have been
avoided if the former employer had policies about conflicts of interest,
system access privileges, and keeping logs.
At An Oil Company...
An oil company computer technician compiled a list of jokes about
sex. Proud of his list, he broadcast this list on the Internet,
appending his electronic mail address to the end, just in case the
recipients happened to have heard any new ones. Management was able
to have the posting deleted from several discussion groups, but
was not able to control copies that had been made. Around the same
time the same technician had printed a copy of his list, and when
distracted by something else, had left it in the hopper of a departmental
printer. Women in the department objected that they had been subjected
to sex jokes via email that they didn't want to hear. They pointed
to the Internet postings and the printer output as examples. The
pending sexual harassment lawsuit was settled for an undisclosed
sum. A policy about permissible use of the Internet, as well as
a policy about representations made using the company name on the
Internet were noticeably lacking.
At A Local Newspaper...
A local newspaper had no policy requiring the termination of user-ID
and password privileges after an employee left. A senior reporter
left the newspaper, and shortly thereafter, the newspaper had trouble
because the competition consistently picked-up on their exclusive
stories (scoops). An investigation of the logs revealed that the
former employee had been consistently accessing their computer to
get ideas for stories at his new employer.
At A Midwest Manufacturing Company...
A virus hoax sent by email through the Internet indicated that if
people receive a message with the heading "Join the Crew"
they should not read it. The hoax went on to state that this email
would erase a hard drive if ever it should be displayed. Thinking
that they were doing others a favor, 10% of the staff at a large
manufacturing company broadcast the hoax to all the people they
knew. Because no policy defined how they should handle these warnings,
they flooded the company's internal networks with email and caused
a great deal of unnecessary technical staff time to be wasted.
At a West Coast Manufacturing Company...
Because it had no policy requiring employee private data to be encrypted
when held in storage, a large manufacturing company found itself
facing a public relations problem. A thief made off with a computer
disk containing detailed personal details and bank account information
on more than 20,000 current and former employees. The press speculated
that this could be used to facilitate identity theft, including
application for credit cards in the names of other people. The event
precipitated a massive notification process including recommendations
on changes to bank account numbers.
At a Major Online Service Company...
A Navy enlisted man registered with an Internet online service company
and filled out a profile form which indicated that he was gay. An
employee at the service company, after an inquiry from the Navy,
shared this profile information with the Navy's "top brass."
Based on this information, the enlisted man was given a dishonorable
discharge. The enlisted man sued the Navy for violating its own
"don't ask, don't tell" policy, and won an honorable discharge
with retirement benefits as a result. The online service company
publicly stated that its employee had violated "the privacy
policy," but this policy had been violated on multiple occasions
before including top management's publicly stated intention to sell
customer home telephone numbers to telephone marketers. At least
the service firm now admits that it has a policy.
For a confidential no obligation discussion about whether your
organization needs information security policies, please give us
a call at 1-800-421-8031 or email us at info@tramenco.com.
Return to Secure Policies
Does Your Organization Need Information
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