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32,000 Farmers Financial Information Stolen

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    32,000 Farmers Financial Information Stolen

    Stolen laptop contained 32,000 farmers' financial data
    Last Updated: Thursday, June 5, 2008 | 8:55 AM CT Comments17Recommend18CBC News
    About 32,000 Canadian farmers are on the alert after learning a laptop containing their financial information has been stolen.

    The laptop was stolen when a programmer working for the Canadian Canola Growers Association took the machine off-site for routine maintenance. CCGA general manager Rick White described the theft as a classic "smash and grab."

    The laptop has the bank account numbers and social insurance numbers of farmers who applied for Agriculture Canada's advance payments program, which is administered by the CCGA on behalf of the federal government.

    The federal department has sent letters out to all farmers affected by the theft.

    "We treat this very seriously," White said. "This is an unfortunate incident, a very low-risk one."

    While farmers should report any suspicious financial transactions, the strict security measures being used on the laptop reduce the chances of information being misused, White said.

    "There was a very strong password protection on it, [and] there was a biometric fingerprint reader on it," he said. "That would prohibit anyone other than the user or the person with the password to access the data on the laptop."

    The Canadian Canola Growers Association represents six provincial grower organizations in Canada, from Ontario across the Prairies to B.C.

    #2
    The Password protection will not protect these farmers data. Just swap the hard drive and plug it into a different machine. The best policy is to not store sensitive and confidential information on a laptop. It was very irresponsible of the Canola Growers to do this and raises questions about allowing these organizations to be entrusted with handling the advances.

    Comment


      #3
      The information is worth a lot of money to chemical, fertilizer, real estate, banking, machinery, mineral rights, oil, you name it, etc. companies.

      Countless dollars.

      The person who was in charge of this information was.....?

      Is that person still employed?


      Why ws the information for all 32,000 put in one spot? Why wasn't the info broken up? Three places at 10,000 names in each place?

      Why wasn't each farmer assigned a number? ie. Lee Melvill #666

      That way the info and the ID was not easily recoverable and only canola staff had access.

      Something not ringing true here.

      Parsley

      Comment

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