Rising Laptop Theft
As the rate and
sophistication of laptop theft raised many new products are hitting the
market to help businesses and institutions protect themselves.
Laptop security cabinets
- Designed primarily for hospitals, educational institutions, law
enforcement Can hold a large number of laptops is a secure environment.
Some units are available with internal power and CAT 5 cabling so
laptops are charing and available through a network while securely
locked and stored. Laptop lockers
- Designed for securing individual laptop computers by providing a
secure storage box bolted the desk of work table. Used primarily by
Medical professionals and teachers.
Laptop theft statistics
2002
In the US, 53% more notebooks were stolen in 2001 than in 2000
Source: Safeware Insurance Group
The
theft of a laptop results in an average financial loss of $89,000; only
a small percentage of the sum actually relates to the hardware cost.
Source: 2002 Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime & Security Survey
Financial loss due to laptop theft has been second only to loss due to computer virus for the last seven years running.
Source: 2002 Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime & Security Survey
The average financial loss resulting from a laptop theft grew by 44% from 2000 to 2001 ($62,000 to $89,000)
Source: 2001 and 2002 Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime & Security Survey
Each IT security breach costs UK firms with a turnover of more than £35m an average of £77,000
Source: IT Week (UK Magazine), March 25, 2002
2001
Although
the laptop's claim to fame is its mobility, according to a recent
survey in Support Republic, respondents indicated that laptops were
most often lost or stolen on corporate property, not while traveling.
Source: TechRepublic, June 4, 2001
Informal surveys indicate that about 10 to 15 percent of laptops are stolen by criminals intent on selling the data.
Source: Securityfocus.com, July 30, 2001
An
average company with 10,000 mobile workers spends $7 million a year on
lost, missing or broken laptops, according to the Meta Group in
Stamford, Conn.
Source: USATODAY.com, March 13, 2001
According to Safeware...some 208,000 notebooks with a value of nearly $640 million were reported stolen last year.
Source: InformationWeek Online, October 16, 2001
Medium and large sized companies lose an average of 11.65 notebook
computers every year due to theft.
Source: Kensington Notebook Security Survey, October 2001
92% of IT professionals claim notebook security to be at least somewhat important to their company.
Source: Kensington Notebook Security Survey, October 2001
IT professionals underestimate the real cost of one stolen notebook by 90%
Source: Kensington Notebook Security Survey, October 2001
Over 80% of IT professionals agree that notebook computers are either extremely or very likely to be stolen.
Source: Kensington Notebook Security Survey, October 2001
2000
In the US, 21% more notebooks were stolen in 2000 than in 1999
Source: Safeware Insurance Group
By
one insurance industry estimate, (laptop theft) will cost the nation
$800 million this year-and that's just the cost of the computers.
Source: The Washington Post Company, November 5, 2000
1 in 10 notebooks are stolen and 88% never recovered
Source: Tech Republic survey
1999
A
recent study conducted by the FBI found that 57% of computer crimes
were linked to stolen computers that were then used to break into
computer servers later on
Source: SC Magazine, May 1999 quoting CSI/FBI
If
your company experiences computer-related thefts and you do nothing to
correct the problem, there is an 89% chance you will be hit again
Source: Irvine Police Dept, California
Two
out of five companies reporting computer thefts (41.3%) said that these
thefts are occurring within the office. A third of the thefts occurred
while outside the office (31.9%).
Source: Kensington Technology Group Computer Security Survey, 1999
1998
Rising laptop theft ... is costing laptop buyers an estimated $150 extra per machine
Source: Computerworld, August 3, 1998 issue, front page
Security breach statistics
___________________________________________
2002
60% of all corporate data assets reside unprotected on PCs.
Source: Search Security Newsletter, April 4, 2002
Ninety
percent of corporations and government agencies detected computer
security breaches within the last twelve months; 80% acknowledged
financial losses due to these breaches.
Source: 2002 Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime & Security Survey
The
average financial loss from computer security breaches in 2001 was over
two million dollars per company. The most serious financial losses
occurred through theft of proprietary information.
Source: 2002 Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime & Security Survey
Thirty-four
percent of organizations who have a security breach report the
intrusions to law enforcement. (In 1996, only 16% acknowledged
reporting intrusions to law enforcement.)
Source: 2002 Computer Security Institute/FBI Computer Crime & Security Survey
The average security breach costs companies an estimated £16,000
Source: The Register, March 18, 2002
2001
A
survey of 4,500 security professionals revealed that 'enhancing network
security' was identified as the top strategic security priority for
companies, and was noted by respondents as increasing in importance in
2001 over 2000.
Source: Information Week
Two-thirds of
UK firms have suffered a serious incident such as hacking, virus
attacks or credit card fraud. For the first time ever, most of the
incidents originated from outside of the company, not inside of the
company. In addition, negative publicity rather than direct financial
loss harms businesses the most.
Source: CBI and Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales (ICAEW) Fraud Advisory Panel's Cybercrime Survey 2001
Security is the #2 issue in the minds of IT managers.
Source: Gartner IT Professional Survey, October 3, 2001
Sixty to 70 percent of attack vulnerability resides in the people area.
Source: eWeek, October 22, 2001
Network security breaches put 5.57% of a business's annual gross revenue at risk
Source: OMNI Consulting Group, February 2001
41%
of CEOs, company presidents, and managing directors are now actively
involved in setting information security policy-10% more than a year
ago.
Source: IOMA's Security Director's Report, November 2001
2000
In
2000, ...42% [of respondents] were willing and/or able [to quantify
financial losses]...the losses from these 273 respondents totaled
$265,589,940.
Source: 2000 CSI/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey
74% of survey respondents acknowledged financial losses, but only 42% of respondents could quantify the losses.
Source: 2000 CSI/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey
1999
Financial
losses due to computer security breaches mounted to over $100,000,000
for the third straight year...a total of $123,779,000 in losses.
Source: 1999 CSI/FBI Computer Crime and Security Survey
Laptop theft news clippings
___________________________________________
2002
"An
IT security officer at an international metals manufacturer ... said
....an employee's notebook PC was stolen at a hotel, but the incident
was reported only to the company's physical security group. The IT
security officer learned of the theft by chance."We need to work more
closely together on incidents like that. They [the physical security
staff] have no idea what access the user of the notebook may have to
our apps, nor did they ask him if he had any passwords in an open text
file on his system. It was a major security breach through a lack of
communication."
Source: Informationweek.com, February 11, 2002
2001
The
FBI 'lost' 184 laptops along with a number of weapons. At least 14 of
the laptops were believed to have been stolen and one contained
classified information related to two closed espionage cases
Source: USA Today
What
do the U.S. state department, the British military and the FBI have in
common? Each of these security-centric organizations has recently lost
laptops with sensitive information.
Source: Interactive Week Online, August 6, 2001
Laptops
stolen from the Football Association's London ... thieves also stole
hard drives and thousands of disks, believed to include sensitive
material such as bank details.
Source: The Register, May 12, 2001
A
survey ... reveals that a staggering 2,900 laptops, 1,300 PDA's and
over 62,000 mobile phones have been left in London's licensed taxi cabs
in ... 6 months with an average of 3 phones per taxi.
Source: TECS, August 31, 2001
"The
Evening Times reported laptop thefts were on the increase as the
expensive portable computers become more popular....Detective Inspector
George Mitchell, of Stewart Street police station, said: It used to be
video recorders but now it's laptop computers that have become the
favorite for thieves".
Source: TECS, 8/31/01
A notebook with top secret info on arms proliferation disappeared from the State Department.
Three notebooks were stolen from the Democratic National Committee's finance office in New York.
2000
The CEO of Qualcomm had his laptop stolen while it sat upon a podium from which he'd just delivered his speech
Five notebooks were stolen from the Olympic Village in Sydney containing details about the New Zealand team's strategies
An
MI5 agent has admitted losing a laptop notebook containing sensitive
government information at Paddington train station. Security has been
stepped up at MI5 following the theft, which has caused extreme
embarrassment for the security agency and the government.