Technologies that
Bring Peace of Mind
Online
technical Help
and Support
Status live support chat
Live support
Have a question?
Call us Toll-Free at:
1-877-ANTISPY
1-877-2684779
+44-207-099-2078
More contacts


Subscribe to our
RSS feed
Subscribe to our RSS feed
In focus
Hundreds of Thousands of Laptops Lost at U.S. Airports Annually
July 4, 2008 14:20

    This is a weird statistic: Some of the largest and medium-sized U.S. airports report close to 637,000 laptops lost each year, according to the Ponemon Institute survey released Monday. Laptops are most commonly lost at security checkpoints, according to the survey. Close to 10,278 laptops are reported lost every week at 36 of the largest U.S. airports, and 65 percent of those laptops are not reclaimed, the survey said. Around 2,000 laptops are recorded lost at the medium-sized airports, and 69 percent are not reclaimed. Travelers seem to lack confidence that they will recover lost laptops. About 77 percent of people surveyed said they had no hope of recovering a lost laptop at the airport, with 16 percent saying they wouldn't do anything if they lost their laptop during business travel. About 53 percent said that laptops contain confidential company information, with 65 percent taking no steps to protect the information. I don't know how to generalize that to a total number of lost laptops in the U.S.; let's call it 750,000. At $1,000 per laptop -- a very conservative estimate -- that's $750 million in lost laptops annually. Most are lost at security checkpoints, and I'm sure the numbers went up considerably since those checkpoints got more annoying after 9/11. There aren't a lot of real numbers about the costs of increased airport security. We pay in time, in anxiety, in inconvenience. But we also pay in goods. TSA employees steal out of suitcases. And opportunists steal hundreds of millions of dollars of laptops annually.

All news for October 10, 2008
  22:58  Schneier on Security: Friday Squid Blogging: Natural Squid Steganography
  22:45  Martin McKeay: Recording Notice: Security Roundtable - Blogger Ethics
  18:30  Schneier on Security: The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same
  14:39  Martin McKeay: Brute force attacks against WPA/WPA2 using Nvidia cards
  12:35  Schneier on Security: Data Mining for Terrorists Doesn't Work
  00:02  Martin McKeay: Sequoia´s helping decide the election? God help us!

All news for October 9, 2008
  23:00  MSRC: Update 1: Microsoft Security Advisory 951306
  19:07  Schneier on Security: Nonviolent Activists Are Now Terrorists
  17:51  Martin McKeay: Cisco Ooops: drug runner music on VPN CD
  16:40  MSRC: October 2008 Advanced Notification
  12:44  Schneier on Security: "New Attack" Against Encrypted Images
  12:22  Martin McKeay: Step by step guide to the DNS vulnerability
  09:28  Dancho Danchev: Cybercriminals Abusing Lycos Spain To Serve Malware
  09:00  Dancho Danchev: Commoditization of Anti Debugging Features in RATs - Part Two

All news for October 8, 2008
  14:46  Martin McKeay: NoScript protects from ClickJacking
  14:14  Martin McKeay: Big Surprise: Data mining doesn´t catch terrorists
  12:55  Schneier on Security: Chinese Monitoring Skype Messages
  02:23  Martin McKeay: Network Security Podcast, Episode 123

All news for October 7, 2008
  21:51  Schneier on Security: Do-Not-Call Lists
  18:27  Martin McKeay: Recording notice: NSP 123
  15:54  Dancho Danchev: Summarizing Zero Day's Posts for September
  14:49  Martin McKeay: Now he´s done it! Security Mike sells out
  12:21  Dancho Danchev: A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Eight
  11:48  Schneier on Security: The Seven Habits of Highly Ineffective Terrorists
  07:42  Dancho Danchev: Web Based Malware Emphasizes on Anti-Debugging Features
  00:01  Dancho Danchev: Fake Windows XP Activation Trojan Wants Your CVV2 Code
Keywords: hundreds, of, thousands, of, laptops, lost, at, u.s., airports, annually

All news for October, 2008


All news for 2008