InfoSec 2011: Laptop loss costing European firms billions
By Tom Brewster,
Lost laptops are costing Europe dearly, with thousands going missing over the last 12 months costing the continent’s economy billions, a report has claimed.
From April 2010 to the same month this year, 72,789 laptops went missing from the 275 organisations taking part in the Intel and Ponemon Institute study.
The report, which extrapolated figures from a previous study, claimed the total economic impact for participating companies stood at €1.29 billion (£1.13 billion) or, on average, €4.7 million per organisation.
To determine those numbers, the researchers extracted figures from 2009, which suggested the average value of one lost laptop was €35,284 when taking into account various costs - such as those covering intellectual property loss.
Glenn Le Vernois, from Intel's services program office, told IT PRO the €1.29 billion figure was clearly “huge,” indicating businesses should sit up and take notice.
“If companies or individuals don’t know how to actually get their hands around the problem and how to devise a strategy of attack [laptop loss] will continue to be an issue,” Le Vernois said.
The report came after a significant laptop loss over at BP, which saw data of the claimants from the Deepwater Horizon disaster going missing.
Only 34 per cent of lost laptops had encryption, whilst just 26 per cent had backup capabilities. Only a measly seven per cent had other anti-theft features, according to the report.
The education and research sector was the worst offender for losing laptops, followed by health and pharmaceuticals, then the public sector.
“The companies - this goes for both Europe and US - that have the most amount of confidential data on their laptops, they do adopt encryption a little more, but still they have so many laptops that are not covered,” Le Vernois added.
“Understand what you are carrying around, put a dollar amount on it and understand the economic impact on the business.”
Symantec and Ponemon Institute data released last month showed the average data breach cost UK organisations £1.9 million in 2010, up 13 per cent from 2009 and 18 per cent from 2008.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Security Analysis & Insight
What is your password worth?
Would you be tempted to sell off company passwords for a fee? If not, seems like you're in the minority, acccording to research.
- Macs under attack?
- Intel: security inside
- Are you spending too much on IT security?
- Does the government want to snoop on your data?
- Eurocrats versus the cyber criminals
- The truth about spam
- Google and privacy: What’s the problem?
- Q&A: Symantec’s CISO on the source code hack
- RSA: Back from the breach?
Latest Security Reviews
Check Point 2210 Appliance review
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Most popular
- UK regulator shuts down Angry Birds scam
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- IBM bans use of Siri on iPhones
- Chromebooks: What's gone wrong?
- HP plans massive job cuts
- EMC World 2012: Tucci declares Documentum is here to stay
- Dell EqualLogic PS6100XS review
- Macs and Android under malware threat
- RIM loses its head of sales
- Local fibre broadband needs common standards
Latest News Videos in Security
IT PRO Podcast: Are UK data protection laws flawed?
We bring in two experts to talk about the problems with UK data protection law and the way it is managed.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.






shift the bulk of the TCO?
I saw a few years back KLM tried a concept of getting users to buy their own laptops and only subsidising part of the cost. Specifying some security, OS, application and operational requirements. They reportedly saved around £2000 per user (significant as they were looking at a 500 user environment). A user is more inclined to look after their own equipment, removing a large chunk of the TCO.
Using products like truecrypt or bitlocker to secure local info. Then using a secure (runable) product like G/On to access corp apps and offer facilities like backup (via controlled ftp freeware).
A company would be able to reduce that risk and also leverage users own carbon footprint and drive for the latest technologies. Now that G/On supports iPads & Linux could also mean a jump ahead of consumerisation too.
By Ip5_23c405e6497 on Wednesday Apr 20