Another School Exposes Private Information 298
A user writes "In the wake of other schools announcing the theft of hardware containing sensitive student information, Miami University, of Oxford, Ohio, has announced that a file containing the name, Social Security number, the grade point average for the Fall 2002 semester, cumulative grade point average, and other related academic information, such as credit hours attempted that semester, for all 21,000 students who attended the Fall 2002 term has been available on a web server for the last three years. The discovery was made this week and the university is taking steps to deal with the fall-out sure to come."
Who are they hiring? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:3, Interesting)
If the attitude of the students is any reflection on the attitude of the staff, I'd want to beat people there...
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:3, Interesting)
But the problem here is human error. If the ex-chair or whoever that was, took the file and put it into his public folder, no security, no firewall, no isolated mainframes are going to help.
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:3, Informative)
You can request a random ID to be issued to you, but by the time incoming students realize that their SSN is their campuswide ID, it's pretty much too late.
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:2)
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:5, Informative)
All eyes towards the mighty CIS degree (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:5, Informative)
Apparantly there's this list of all the students academic info that's sent out to all the Deans each semester. One of the Deans gave it to another professor for whatever reason and that professor accidently puts it on a public drive and forgets about it for 3 years.
Nice. Real nice.
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:5, Insightful)
It takes a lot of work to make strong, accountable policies and carefully define simple, but narrow ways of accessing information (i.e. not just dumping the student records excel file in the share folder). For example, everyone on campus has network access which is most often directly linked to online access. If one person screws up and misuses their data access priveleges by opening up information over the network, it is very hard to tell unless you have accountability in place. And how many places do security reviews?
When it becomes part of people's jobs to protect information, it will become a responsibilty. Right now, blaming one or two people is rarely a good solution. It's like someone who blames an outsourced medical transcripts worker in Pakistan for leaking information. Sure, it is there fault but the problem is much larger than one low-paid worker. Executive or peon, security is a group responsibility in information-rich, networked environments.
Re:Who are they hiring? (Score:5, Interesting)
I could be wrong here. If someone knows a way to scan an entire enterprise, when you don't have admin access to a number of the systems, and you don't have a list of all of the programs which are in use (so you don't know all the proprietary data formats), I would love to hear about your solution. Oh, you probably also need to be able to search documents and databases for encrypted versions, even though you don't have the keys... Management at the university I work for asked how we could scan the enterprise to find all sensitve data after we had a similar incident.
The person who posted the data on the website is clearly the one who is responsible for that data. That would be the retired faculty member. An admin is responsible for keeping the web server running. Was the information available on the Internet? If so, the admin was doing a their job well.
There are some fundamental questions universities need to be asking themselves:
Why doesn't the government step in in these situations? Clearly this is a FERPA violation on a huge scale. The individual who put the information on the website ultimately should be held accountable. If nothing else, action should be taken against the university. If the university gets more than a slap on the wrist, you can bet that the next person to do something dumb like this will be held accountable by the university.
I probably shouldn't ask for that, as they'll probably decide it's the sys admin's fault...
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:My SSN is stolen - I can't party anymore! (Score:5, Informative)
Peace
P.S.
yay, my first post!!
Re:My SSN is stolen - I can't party anymore! (Score:2)
Re:My SSN is stolen - I can't party anymore! (Score:2)
Re:My SSN is stolen - I can't party anymore! (Score:2)
Yes, Miami was a name of a local tribe and Oxford, well, I hope you know where they got that one...
Re:My SSN is stolen - I can't party anymore! (Score:2)
Yeah, there are plenty of dr. gonzo's [wikipedia.org] out there, you can thank the late H.S. Thomson that ...
Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:3, Funny)
I say, sirruh, we Americans may on average be large assholes, but that is a bit much, don't you think?
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
Sounds exactly like something the coach in my high school would say. He was convicted of abusing his son.
Re:Why humiliate them? (Score:2)
And I'm sorry that your father abused you, if that is what you were suggesting.
It's Everywhere (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's Everywhere (Score:2)
http://www.muohio.edu/ [muohio.edu]
Re:It's Everywhere (Score:5, Informative)
How much you wanna bet... (Score:3, Interesting)
Private information (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to me that the only useful thing is the names/SSN combination.
Unless you could blackmail some poorly-achieving students by threatening to tell their parents their real marks?
Re:Private information (Score:2)
Included demographics (Score:5, Funny)
The information released also included demographics. I've obtained the information and masked off the personally identifying information so I could show the sort of demographic information made available:
... Gender Dress ...
... Male, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap
... Female, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap with pony tail pulled through
... Male, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap
... Female, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap with pony tail pulled through
... Male, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap
... Male, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap
... Female, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap with pony tail pulled through
... Female, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap with pony tail pulled through
... Male, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap
... Female, Khaki shorts, white T-shirt, ball cap with pony tail pulled through
(if you've been there, you'll understand)
Miami University, of Oxford, Ohio (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, it's in Oxford... must be in England.
Bzzzzzt. BUT NO! It's in Ohio!
It must have taken a long time to come up with that combination of naming and placement.
Re:Miami University, of Oxford, Ohio (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Miami University, of Oxford, Ohio (Score:2, Informative)
Um, what? Just because you've never heard of us, doesn't mean we're not more respected than the other Miamis (and most schools in general). I don't have the numbers (although I'm sure someone else will quote them), but we're in the 60's as far as rank in the US, and the low twenties as far as rank among only public schools (i.e., schools in our general price range).
(Not that I care, because I don't necessarily agree with those rankings.)
Plus, we just last year had a large strike of Miami Staff, which
Explanation (Score:5, Informative)
The city in Florida sprung up at the end of the 1800s, and adopted the name because they thought it meant something vaguely pleasant regarding water.
So if anybody's ignorant, it's actually the clowns in Florida.
Re:Explanation (Score:2)
Re:Explanation (Score:2)
And then they got the vote! (Score:2)
Ba dum dum:-).
is this a fark post? (Score:4, Funny)
Met a girl from Miami that went to Oxford, and didn't like the song "Ohio." Seems a little less obscure, too. Yet, this school has 21,000 students? I mean...that's more than the real Oxford...the one that's not in Ohio, but has students from Miami...
now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:5, Interesting)
that's what i would expect at a minimum. on top of other punishment for letting it happen in the first place.
this only reinforces the notion i have that there is absolutely no privacy. once your data is in someone elses hands (and all your data does in fact belong to them) you can kiss your privacy goodbye.
there is no recourse whatsoever. you cannot even sue them or ask for damages.
your personal data is obviously worth something to sell to third party "warehouses" but when they expose your data to the whole world, at that point it ceases to be worth anything...
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:3, Insightful)
But that would put almost any business OUT of business.
I have no idea what the profit margin for them is.. but even if 25% of their income is pure profit, giving out a free year means they will make zero profit for four years.
What would be more realistic is to give back everyone a years PROFIT on their tuition. That way the schools expenses are covered, teachers get paid, ect.
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:2)
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:2)
Most (if not all) universities and colleges take a loss
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:2)
Oh, and they're increasing tuition [dailyfreepress.com] as well.
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:2)
You're off by a couple of zeros. His salary is $500,000. Not, $500,000,000.
As for that beeing "a lot", consider that the presidents main job is to raise money for a university. The more successful he is at it, the better off the college is. Best way I can say is to look at how well he has been doing as a fund raiser for the school. Your university still n
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:2)
Re:now that they've had their data exposed... (Score:3, Interesting)
Why couldn't you sue them if you can prove damages? There's no liability exemption for universities. I know the courts get some well deserved bad press but we're not in Cuba.
Another Security issue (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Another Security issue (Score:4, Funny)
Easily solved with software (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Easily solved with software (Score:2)
I think you meant a 'Web' Robot.
http://www.robotstxt.org/wc/faq.html [robotstxt.org]
programmed correctly you can even assign the robot a login/pass to default to when asked
Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
A lot of universities use SSNs as student IDs which is really retarded. Why don't they just assign everyone a 14 digit number or a shorter alphanumeric code I don't know. Probably because they don't know how to do it and won't spend the money to ask somebody else who knows.
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:3, Interesting)
My University used to do this, but changed their policy after 2000. Their reasoning was that federal law had made it illegal to use SSNs in any form, including just part of the SSN, as identification.
Anyway, it seems my school was ahead of the curve for once.
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
Also, it seems, some utilities. My officemate today had a situation where the f'ing gas company required it. So you can also live without heat.
It sucks, but it's the way it is. The best you can do is reduce how often you use it. My PPO lets you request they use a dummy number, but the beauty is it's the same format as a real SSN, so when the doctor asks for your social, you give 'em the fake.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2)
Re:Just say 'No' to giving schools the SSN (Score:2, Informative)
That fits with my experience (Score:4, Insightful)
BAM! (Score:3, Funny)
Simple Solution (Score:3, Funny)
In the end, can be a good thing too (Score:3, Interesting)
Last year, a student's ID was their SSN. Now, it's an ID assigned by our peoplesoft system. If i forget my ID at, oh say, the campus book store *shudder*, they can't look it up w/ my social. Like I said, good things can sometimes come out of these events.
Re:In the end, can be a good thing too (Score:2)
Re:In the end, can be a good thing too (Score:2)
At UHA (uni of hartford, right near you
3 years ?! (Score:2)
Restrict what's in your webspace!
What I'd be concerned about is did the "now retired faculty member" know the directory where they put the file was on a public server or was the file put there and then someone did a chmod 755 on the dir, possibly after they retired by the replacement who didn't know any better. The school I'm at has school.edu
Re:3 years ?! (Score:2)
Re:3 years ?! (Score:2)
Re:3 years ?! (Score:2)
SchoolMAX SchoolHAX (Score:4, Informative)
Re:SchoolMAX SchoolHAX (Score:3, Funny)
Thank you
SchoolMAX
Why does everyone tag everything with your SSN? (Score:2, Interesting)
Get used to it (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Get used to it (Score:2)
My point (Score:2)
The Question is... (Score:3, Insightful)
How many schools have info like this (or worse) posted on some forgotten webpage?
Maybe the IT departments of schools should look into hiring quality people for their systems instead of leaving it up to educators with no real-life experience or student staff that rotate every semester.
probably happens all the time (Score:5, Interesting)
I imagine this happens a lot, especially at research institutions whose scientists need to be able to receive large amounts of data from collaborators without having to set up accounts for them.
Free identity theft monitoring (Score:5, Funny)
1974 Privacy Act (Score:3, Informative)
If you do not see a privacy act notice on government paperwork, then don't give your SSN. It's hard to say no, and many govt workers are completely ignorant of the law, but you've got to take a stand.
Non-government entities can ask you for your SSN for any reason or no reason, but you don't have to give it to them. If a company says they have to have it, be prepared to take your business elsewhere.
So, is Miami of Ohio a government entity? Many universities are because they are state funded or created by an act of state law or consitution. If so, demand that privacy act notice. If not, take your money somewhere else.
I doubt any school would deny you admission because you refuse to give your ssn. What do they do for the foreign students?
You'll never know what you can do without giving out (your SSN) until you stop giving in.
Things I've done without giving out my SSN: got real phone service, got satelite TV, been to the doctor/hospital, got medical insurance, got internet service, got married. Yeah sure, I wasn't able to get that extra 10% off at Pier One by signing up for a credit card. So what!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I'd like to know... (Score:2)
Why does the school have the SSN's of all the students? They can't all be getting financial aid, or be employed by the school.
Anything can happen at a school called "Miami University" located in Oxford, Ohio. Up until about 20 minutes I thought Miami University was in Florida, United States; and that Oxford was in England.
It's no damn wonder they lost files! Google maps couldn't find a Miami University in Oxford, Ohio!
Re:I'd like to know... (Score:2)
BT? (Score:3, Funny)
I'm glad I was in college in the 1980s (Score:4, Funny)
Back then we carried around sheets of paper with our information. Some used a redundancy method known as "carbon copy" - in which the user would write once and the data would be recorded in many places.
Though I had to physically walk miles to track down professors without watches, the data was always securely stored in the back pocket of my jeans or stuffed into my backpack.
Best of all, we relied upon social engineering security and things like locked wooden file cabinets. The security team was staffed by should-have-already-retired women who hated all people and wore too-tight pastel colored polyester blouses and shirts. But nothing got past them.
The University should be commended (Score:3, Insightful)
The suggestion that the University should have refunded $20K to all of its 2002 students because its theoretically possible that somebody might have gotten their information is positively bizzare.
Re:TFA from a MU Grad who Just got Notice (Score:5, Informative)
"On Monday, September 12, 2005, Miami University became aware that a grade report from the Fall 2002 semester had been unwittingly placed by a now-retired faculty member into a file that was accessible via the Internet.
Note the 'retired faculty member'. Not a student or a hacker.
This seems like a common problem, how does one protect again appending sensitive information from a protected document into an ordinary text or non-sensitive file? Is there a technology out there that can mark the data so it can not be copied into another file even though it is accessible to some. Apparently the 'now retired faculty member' had access to the file. Probably used cut and paste to imbed it into a file he/she could access from home/laptop etc. We had lots of problems like this at government locations I worked at
I understand your anger but this does not seem to be a malicious act, it appears to be an honest screw up and is not like the stupidity of Citibank sending their files via un-encrypted tapes by UPS.
The school seems to be handling this OK.
Re:TFA from a MU Grad who Just got Notice (Score:2)
I have no problem with harsh punishments for honest screwups, if the consequences of the screwups are great. If the consequences are really great (like massive loss of life and/or extraordinary dollar loss) then I support throwing people in jail or even capital punishment even when the people intended no wrong (of course, if they did intend harm then the punishment should be much more extreme). In the
Re:TFA from a MU Grad who Just got Notice (Score:2)
I think that with schools placing so much in adjunct faculty, cut backs and general lack of financial support from our governments, we can expect many non-professionals doing tasks that they did not have to do in the past.
I think this is a systemic breakdown within
Re:Wow (Score:3, Insightful)
Carmen elektra and Sarah jessica parker are from there i think.
and Miami girls are just an example of what happens when 3 or 4 generations of rich people marry the most beutiful women they can afford. Standard upper class breeding.