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June 26th, 2009

Out of business, Clear may sell customer data

Three days after ceasing operations, owners of the Clear airport security screening service acknowledged that their database of sensitive customer information may end up in someone else's hands, but only if it goes to a similar provider, authorized by the U.S. Transportation Security Administration.

Until this week, the Clear service had given customers a way to skip long security lines in certain airports. For a $199 annual fee, air travelers could be pre-screened for flight and then use Clear's security checkpoints instead of the TSA's. Clear was run by New York's Verified Identity Pass, which also shut down on Monday.

Customers had to provide personal information, including credit card numbers, fingerprints and iris scans in order to participate in the program. After Clear abruptly shut its doors -- it has not yet declared bankruptcy -- some worried that this data could fall into the wrong hands.

"They had your social security information, credit information, where you lived, employment history, fingerprint information," said Clear customer David Maynor, who is chief technical officer with Errata Security in Atlanta. "They should be the only ones who have access to that information."

Maynor wants Clear to delete his information, but that isn't happening, the company said in a note posted to its Web site Thursday.

Clear's IT partner, Lockheed Martin, is working with the company "to ensure an orderly shutdown as the program closes," Clear said. But in a section of the note entitled, "Will personally identifiable information be sold?" Clear acknowledged that it could be used by someone else, presumably if Clear's assets were sold. "If the information is not used for a Registered Traveler program, it will be deleted," Clear said.

Boasting more than 260,000 customers, Clear was the largest private company authorized to provide airport security services, under a TSA program called Registered Traveler. Other providers, who may now be interested in purchasing Clear's assets, include Flo and Preferred Traveler.

Until Clear's demise, Registered Traveler companies operated in about 20 airports nationwide. Once a traveller has registered with any one of these companies, he is given a travel card that can be used for security screening by any company in the Registered Traveler program.

Last year the TSA temporarily yanked Clear's Registered Traveler status after the company lost an unencrypted laptop containing data on 33,000 customers at San Francisco International Airport. A few days later, Clear was allowed back into the program after the laptop mysteriously reappeared and the TSA determined that Clear was properly encrypting data.

Although it appears to be retaining information on its central databases, Clear said it has erased PC hard drives at its airport screening kiosks, and it is wiping employee computers as well, using what it calls a "triple wipe process." This technique, used by the U.S. Department of Defense, is considered to be a reliable way of erasing data.

"Clear is communicating with TSA, airport and airline sponsors, and subcontractors, to ensure that the security of the information and systems is maintained throughout the closure process," the company said.

Customers will be notified via e-mail when their information is deleted.

That wasn't good enough for Maynor. "How about the opposite? Where if they sell my information, they send me an e-mail," he said.


Source: ComputerWorld




All news for September 18th, 2009:
20:13Microsoft Internet Explorer SSL security hole lingers
20:11Conservatives call for DNA databases to be reduced
20:09McAfee warns of bogus security suite
20:08Security market remains buoyant in choppy waters
20:07The good and bad of government in the cloud
20:05Vista, Windows 7 Are More Secure than Snow Leopard
20:04Will Google's Buy of reCAPTCHA Hurt Internet Security?
20:01HHS guts health-care breach notification law, groups warn
20:00Man gets 15 months for E-Trade skimming scam
19:59Sophisticated botnet causing a surge in click fraud
19:59Microsoft sues scareware scammers
19:58Software company fined for trading with the enemy
19:58Misdirected spyware infects Ohio hospital
19:57Firefox's Flash check drives 10M to Adobe's download
19:55Microsoft, Yahoo in informal talks with EU over search deal

All news for September 17th, 2009:
19:59Wireless Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems: Selection Criteria
19:58How to Compare and Use Wireless Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems
19:54Social Networking a Tool for More Secure ID Management?
19:521.8 million UK postcodes available online
19:51Batman 'glide' disabled in anti-piracy measure
19:47Study: eBay, Yahoo among most trusted companies
19:45One in eight Brits hit by identity theft
19:44Attack E-mails Use Fake Shipping Confirmation Ruse
19:44An Amazing Laptop Recovery Story
19:41Has Conroy's dept received filter report?
19:39Will security concerns darken Google's government cloud?
19:35New phishing attack chats up victims
19:34Report: Skype founders sue Skype
19:34Google buys reCAPTCHA to boost book scanning efforts
19:33Microsoft offers tools for secure application development



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September 18th, 2009

Microsoft Internet Explorer SSL security hole lingers

Conservatives call for DNA databases to be reduced

McAfee warns of bogus security suite

Security market remains buoyant in choppy waters

The good and bad of government in the cloud

Vista, Windows 7 Are More Secure than Snow Leopard

Will Google's Buy of reCAPTCHA Hurt Internet Security?

HHS guts health-care breach notification law, groups warn

Man gets 15 months for E-Trade skimming scam

Sophisticated botnet causing a surge in click fraud

Microsoft sues scareware scammers

Software company fined for trading with the enemy

Misdirected spyware infects Ohio hospital

Firefox's Flash check drives 10M to Adobe's download

Microsoft, Yahoo in informal talks with EU over search deal

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