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Cell phones won't keep your secrets
CNN.com technology
August 30, 2006
Note that
GreenPhone provides three ways you can remove any data in your devices: Use
your user manual, call the device manufacturer, or use the link we provide
to the Data Eraser Tool (http://wirelessrecycling.com/home/data_eraser). Note that we also remove data when we find it on
phones, and we always perform a “hard reset / Zero Out” of data on smart
phones (Treos, Blackberries and MS Mobile powered devices) as a standard
procedure. However, we cannot be liable for any data you send on to us, so
please use the resources provided to make sure you are not sharing
anything you wouldn’t want to. We don’t want your data, just the devices
so we can recycle them ;-)
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The married
man's girlfriend sent a text message to his cell phone: His wife was
getting suspicious. Perhaps they should cool it for a few days.
"So," she wrote, "I'll talk to
u next week."
"You want a break from me?
Then fine," he wrote back.
Later, the married man bought
a new phone. He sold his old one on eBay, at Internet auction, for $290.
The guys who bought it now
know his secret.
The married man had followed
the directions in his phone's manual to erase all his information,
including lurid exchanges with his lover. But it wasn't enough.
Selling your old phone once
you upgrade to a fancier model can be like handing over your diaries. All
sorts of sensitive information pile up inside our cell phones, and
deleting it may be more difficult than you think.
A popular practice among
sellers, resetting the phone, often means sensitive information appears to
have been erased. But it can be resurrected using specialized yet
inexpensive software found on the Internet.
A company, Trust Digital of
McLean, Virginia, bought 10 different phones on eBay this summer to test
phone-security tools it sells for businesses. The phones all were fairly
sophisticated models capable of working with corporate e-mail systems.
Curious software experts at
Trust Digital resurrected information on nearly all the used phones,
including the racy exchanges between guarded lovers.
The other phones contained:
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One company's plans to win a
multimillion-dollar federal transportation contract.
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E-mails about another firm's
$50,000 payment for a software license.
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Bank accounts and passwords.
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Details of prescriptions and
receipts for one worker's utility payments.
The recovered information was
equal to 27,000 pages -- a stack of printouts 8 feet high.
"We found just a mountain of
personal and corporate data," said Nick Magliato, Trust Digital's chief
executive.
Many of the phones were owned
personally by the sellers but crammed with sensitive corporate
information, underscoring the blurring of work and home. "They don't come
with a warning label that says, 'Be careful.' The data on these phones is
very important," Magliato said.
One phone surrendered the
secrets of a chief executive at a small technology company in Silicon
Valley. It included details of a pending deal with Adobe Systems Inc., and
e-mail proposals from a potential Japanese partner:
"If we want to be exclusive
distributor in Japan, what kind of business terms you want?" asked the
executive in Japan.
Trust Digital surmised that
the U.S. chief executive gave his old phone to a former roommate, who used
it briefly then sold it for $400 on eBay. Researchers found e-mails
covering different periods for both men, who used the same address until
recently.
Experts said giving away an
old phone is commonplace. Consumers upgrade their cell phones on average
about every 18 months.
"Most people toss their phones
after they're done; a lot of them give their old phones to family members
or friends," said Miro Kazakoff, a researcher at Compete Inc. of Boston
who follows mobile phone sales and trends. He said selling a used phone --
which sometimes can fetch hundreds of dollars -- is increasingly popular.
The 10 phones Trust Digital
studied represented popular models from leading manufacturers. All the
phones stored information on "flash" memory chips, the same technology
found in digital cameras and some music players.
Flash memory is inexpensive
and durable. But it is slow to erase information in ways that make it
impossible to recover. So manufacturers compensate with methods that erase
data less completely but don't make a phone seem sluggish.
Phone manufacturers usually
provide instructions for safely deleting a customer's information, but
it's not always convenient or easy to find. Research in Motion Ltd. has
built into newer Blackberry phones an easy-to-use wipe program.
Palm Inc., which makes the
popular Treo phones, puts directions deep within its Web site for what it
calls a "zero out reset." It involves holding down three buttons
simultaneously while pressing a fourth tiny button on the back of the
phone.
But it's so awkward to do that
even Palm says it may take two people. A Palm executive, Joe Fabris, said
the company made the process deliberately clumsy because it doesn't want
customers accidentally erasing their information.
Trust Digital resurrected
erased e-mails and other information from a used Treo phone provided by
The Associated Press for a demonstration after it was reset and appeared
empty. Once the phone was reset using Palm's awkward "zero-out" technique,
no information could be recovered. The AP already used that technique to
protect data on its reporters' phones.
"The tools are out there" for
hackers and thieves to rummage through deleted data on used phones, Trust
Digital's chief technology officer, Norm Laudermilch, said. "It definitely
does not take a Ph.D."
Fabris, Palm's director of
wireless solutions, said the company may warn customers in an upcoming
newsletter about the risks of selling their used phones after AP's
inquiries. "It might behoove us to raise this issue," Fabris said.
Dean Olmstead of Fresno,
California, sold his Treo phone on eBay after using it six months. He
didn't know about Palm's instructions to safely delete all his personal
information. Now, he's worried.
"I probably should have done
that," Olmstead said. "Folks need to know this. I'm hoping my phone goes
to a nice person."
Guy Martin of Albuquerque, New
Mexico, wasn't as concerned someone will snoop on his secrets. He also
sold his Treo phone on eBay and didn't delete his information completely.
"I'm not that kind of valuable
person, so I'm not really worried," said Martin, who runs the
www.imusteat.com Web site. "I guarantee that three-quarters of the people
who buy these phones don't think about this."
Trust Digital found no
evidence thieves or corporate spies are routinely buying used phones to
mine them for secrets, Magliato said. "I don't think the bad guys have
figured this out yet."
President Bush's former
cybersecurity adviser, Howard Schmidt, carried up to four phones and
e-mail devices -- and said he was always careful with them. To sanitize
his older Blackberry devices, Schmidt would deliberately type his password
incorrectly 11 times, which caused data on them to self-destruct.
"People are just not aware how
much they're exposing themselves," Schmidt said. "This is more than
something you pick up and talk on. This is your identity. There are people
really looking to exploit this."
Executives at Trust Digital
agreed to review with AP the information extracted from the used phones on
the condition AP would not identify the sellers or their employers. They
also showed AP receipts from the Internet auctions in which they bought
the 10 phones over the summer for prices between $192 and $400 each.
Trust Digital said it intends
to return all the phones to their original owners, and said it kept the
recovered personal information on a single computer under lock and
disconnected from its corporate network at its headquarters in northern
Virginia.
Peiter "Mudge" Zatko, a
respected computer security expert, said phone owners should decide
whether to auction their used equipment for a few hundred dollars -- and
risk revealing their secrets -- or effectively toss their old phones under
a large truck to dispose of them.
What about a case like the
Lothario whose affair Trust Digital discovered?
"I'd run over the phone,"
Zatko said. "Maybe give it an acid bath."
Inserted
comment from GreenPhone: This last rant is just crazy talk. Please do not
drive over your devices, or give them acid baths. You can easily remove
the data on them, and we ask you to do so before sending them in for
recycling.
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