A stolen Cornell University computer has compromised the personal information of thousands of members of the University community. The computer contained the names and social security numbers of current and former students as well as current and former faculty and staff members.
The affected people totaled 22,546 current and former students and 22,731 current and former faculty and staff, amounting to 45,277 people in the Cornell community.
An internal memo sent Friday from University Auditor Mike Dickinson was obtained by WVBR. The message said that currently, no misuse of this sensitive information has been found. Also in the message, Cornell said that they have enlisted the help of Kroll Fraud Solutions to "provide fraud counseling and credit monitoring services at the university's expense."
WVBR spoke early on Tuesday afternoon with University spokesman Simeon Moss who confirmed that a security breach had occurred and that an internal investigation is now underway. Moss declined to comment further.
Shortly after WVBR broke the story on Tuesday, the University notified all students and staff affected by the breach via e-mail late in the afternoon. The e-mail contained preliminary information about the breach and came in advance of formal notifications via U.S. mail.
The official letter will contain a full description of the services the University is offering at its expense.
The computer itself was stolen earlier this month, though University officials only became aware of the security issues late last week. The computer had been issued to a member of the Cornell technical staff, who was correcting transmission errors found in the processing of files. The data was being used for troubleshooting, and under information security policy, should have been in a physically secure location. University officials have stated that the employee's actions violated this policy.
Tune into WVBR this afternoon for continuing coverage and keep your browser on WVBR.com for updates. WVBR will also have exclusive interviews with Cornell officials as the story develops.
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