
How catastrophic would it be for you personally if you were to lose your mobile phone? Or your PDA or laptop?
Last year over 60,000 mobile ‘phones, 5000 PDA’s and 4,500 laptops were left in licensed cabs. How many were left on buses, subways, trams or airlines?
As mobile technology improves what is really alarming is the amount of data that can be held on such devices; thousands of e-mails, documents and pictures!
Figures vary from country to country but an accepted average is that 10% of laptops will be stolen during their working life. Whilst the value of the hardware is easy to calculate what of its contents? Estimates vary from a few thousand pounds to one case that was worth $8.8 Billion due to the business sensitive data held on the hard drive.
On top of that what will happen to the everyday data that is hidden from the naked eye on your hardware? Passwords, Personal Identification Numbers, encryption keys, access points, and the list is endless. The loss of this data could be disastrous in both the professional and personal areas of your life.
Security is always paramount from service providers but how effective is it? Passwords can be cracked, systems broken into and new passwords set. It is possible to buy password cracking software for around £65:00; a small price to pay for getting at your wealth because you forgot to pick up your laptop. We had to work on a PC where the client had not left the password as agreed; we cracked it in 10 seconds and changed the administrator password to make it more secure.
Research also shows that the backing up of data is not uppermost in people’s minds. With so many home or mobile workers backing up is paramount in business and data safety. The problem is that people see it as a laborious chore that they will do when next in the office. This is because only 42% of companies set this up to run automatically; the rest is down to the individual. Just like the lawyer in the Netherlands who had a multi-million court case on his laptop; it was stolen and he lost his job and the company lost the case; all for the sake of an enforced backup regime.
Then there is the situation when you dispose of your hardware. Are you going to leave all that data for somebody to look at five years down the line? Over 50% of computers bought on eBay hold data from their original owners. For assistance with backups, security and data wiping look at
http://www.recyclemypc.co.uk/