Missing Computer Tape Holds 650,000 People's Personal Data

Missing Computer Tape Holds 650,000 People's Personal Data

Jan 18, 07:42 AM

By DAVID KOENIG

By David Koenig

The Associated Press

PLANO, Texas

Personal information on about 650,000 customers of J.C. Penney and up to 100 other retailers could be compromised after a computer tape went missing.

GE Money, which handles credit card operations for J.C. Penney and many other retailers, said Thursday night that the missing information includes Social Security numbers for about 150,000 people.

The information was on a backup computer tape that was discovered missing last October. It was being stored at a warehouse run by Iron Mountain Inc., a data storage company, and was never checked out but can't be found either, said Richard C. Jones, a spokesman for GE Money, part of General Electric Capital Corp.

Jones said there was "no indication of theft or anything of that sort " and no evidence of fraudulent activity on the accounts involved.

Iron Mountain officials didn't immediately respond to requests for comment. J.C. Penney officials said they had been told of the situation and referred further inquiries to GE Money.

Jones declined to identify the other retailers whose customers' information is missing but said "it includes many of the large retail organizations."

Jones said GE Money was paying for 12 months of credit- monitoring service for customers whose Social Security numbers were on the tape.

Incidents like this add to consumer concern about fraud. The Identity Theft Resource Center says there was a six-fold increase last year in the number of records reported compromised in the United States - to 125 million.

Data breaches can stem from hacking, as well as the physical loss or theft of computers of data storage equipment.

TJX Cos., owner of the T.J. Maxx and Marshalls retail chains, reported last year that tens of millions of credit and debit card owners were exposed to fraud when hackers stole data while it was being transmitted wirelessly.

It took GE Money two months to reconstruct the missing tape and identify the people whose information was lost. Since December, the company has been notifying consumers in batches of several thousand and telling them to phone a call center set up to deal with the breach. The notification is expected to be completed next week.

J.C. Penney's card holder Elizabeth Rich of Everett, Wash., got one of the GE Money letters saying her name, address and account number may have been compromised. She said she canceled her card immediately.

breaches

The Identity Theft Resource Center says there was a six-fold increase last year in the number of records reported compromised in the United States - to 125 million.

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