Japanese P2P leak cop fired
A Japanese policeman has been fired after he was held responsible for accidentally leaking confidential information via peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing software installed on his work PC.
The ex-copper, who has not been named, lost his job with the Tokyo Police Department over the leak of personal details of 12,000 people …
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Posted Friday 20th July 2007 18:18 GMT
Dillon Pyron
Fired or resigned?
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Japan, where "falling on your sword" has a whole different meaning "getting handed your head" might be literal.
I'm surprised there's no criminal prosecution. Or should I add "yet"?
Of course, I'm surprised and disgusted at the lack of said prosecution in the US.
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 20:29 GMT
Anonymous Coward
This is a joke, right?
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Surely it would be better for the IT Department to actually look into how the P2P network was connecting?
Shouldn't there big a big giant firewall in place which blocks this type of thing?
Most users wouldn't know how to set up applications to use their company proxy servers and even if they did use the proxy server, surely the proxy should've been configured to only allow HTTP/HTTPS/FTP traffic through?
This is an IT failure - at our work we have a few people who've tried to install P2P software and it just gets nowhere for the aforementioned reasons. It also creates a few minor hassles with registering apps like Adobe Acrobat, but they're happy once you point them to your proxy
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 21:12 GMT
heystoopid
Ho hum!
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Ho hum , hang on a minute I thought , that due to intense public scrutiny and rigorous plant commissioning trials , along with the requirement for planning approval , all power plant design and construction documents including changes are a matter of public record and are fully available to the local earthquake rescue authorities as well!
So who or whom is telling big fibs to save face , I wonder!
The wankers and adherents to the "Peter Principle" have struck yet again!
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 23:24 GMT
Anonymous Coward
Japan culture
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I'm surprised there's no criminal prosecution. Or should I add "yet"?
Well probably it is a high or semi high ranking officer
Tradionally he will resign take the public blame and get a good "pension-job" somewhere to rake in a lot of money.
Police is never wrong in Japan. Once you are arrested you are convicted. This is how they keep their "solved and convicted criminal cases number" so high.
If the crime is too difficult to solve then they will just let the paperwork disappear and thus it is not taken into the statistics.
Posted Friday 20th July 2007 23:52 GMT
Andy
RE:This is a joke, right?
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Anon,
I am with you, I think an IT bod should be ready to fall on his/her sword as well.
Posted Saturday 21st July 2007 09:14 GMT
Keith Langmead
Internal audit?
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"The officer falsely claimed not to be running Winny in an internal audit prior to the leak."
What kind of internal audit are they running there? He "claimed" not to running the software! Surely they should have actually checked, rather than just ask. Sounds a nice and easy audit to me, gather everyone into a room, "Right, raise your hand if you're running anything you shouldn't be on your work computer"... "no one, fantastic, that's the audit for this year done"
Posted Saturday 21st July 2007 23:13 GMT
Alan Donaly
probably wasn't running
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Right the interal audit probably did
check and he installed it after. This
is pretty lame security however and
I really don't get why he would be
able to install any software on his
work PC another situation where
dumb == institution.
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