
In December 2006, Boeing reported the theft of a laptop that contained Social
Security numbers, names and home addresses of 382,000 current and former
employees. The laptop was stolen from an employee's car, the company said. The
incident was particularly noteworthy because it pushed the number of U.S. data
breach victims past the 100 million mark-- nearly one-third of the population
at that time.
Since then, there have been many other incidents of stolen laptops carrying
sensitive data, such as the December 2007 theft of a laptop containing
sensitive information on 268,000 Minnesota-region blood donors.
The anti-theft technology being developed by Intel would presumably give IT
managers a way of protecting this data once a machine has gone missing.
Besides Intel, several other companies are working on the anti-theft
technology, including Lenovo Group, McAfee, Fujitsu Siemens Computers and
Phoenix Technologies.
More details of the technology will be made available when it is closer to
being released, Intel said.
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Sources: Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service