SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Government >> Technology

Holiday Travel: 10 Laptop privacy and safety tips

Holiday Travel: 10 Laptop privacy and safety tips

By:  Thomas Wailgum  On: 24 Nov 2008 For: CIO.com (NA) Creator

According to Gartner, one laptop is stolen every 53 seconds. Here are 10 ways you can ensure laptop safety and privacy as you travel this holiday season

If you're planning on traveling with your laptop this holiday season, you might want to travel prepared. The statistics are overwhelmingly bad: According to Gartner, one laptop is stolen every 53 seconds.

U.S. airports, in particular, have become black holes for business travelers' laptops: 12,000 laptops are lost at U.S. airports every week, and 70 percent of those laptops, which good Samaritans and airport employees return to lost-and-found departments, are never reclaimed, reported the Ponemon Institute.

Increased security measures have created longer checkpoint lines and a more stressful environment. More than 70 percent of business travelers feel rushed when trying to get on their flights, noted the Ponemon research, and 60 percent worry that delays due to security checkpoints will cause them to miss their flight. It's not surprising, then, that according to U.S airport representatives, the most common airport locations where laptops are lost or missing include security checkpoints (40 percent) and departure gates (23 percent), the Ponemon report found.

Add a couple of screaming kids and millions of others trying to "get home for the holidays," and you've got a recipe for laptop loss. "The stress of rushing to catch a flight," notes the Ponemon report, "combined with the number of items business travelers typically carry (such as laptops, cell phones, PDAs, briefcases and luggage) creates a situation that is conducive to property loss."

More from ITWorld Canada

Data back up tips for travelers

10 Tips to Avoid Laptop and Data Loss

To help ensure a safer and less hectic holiday season, Absolute Software, an asset- and data-protection and recovery vendor, offers these 10 tips:

1. Back Up Valuable Data Before Traveling.Travelers should back up their data as often as possible to minimize the risk of data loss in the event that their laptop is stolen, the Absolute Software report urges. "Use an encrypted thumb drive to back up sensitive or valuable files and keep it separate from your laptop," notes the report. "Because the information stored on the laptop is often more valuable than the laptop itself, it is important to treat the data with as much care as possible."

2. Use Laptop Recovery and Data Protection Software. "Laptop recovery tools are highly effective in the event thieves do make off with your gear," according to the report. In addition, the security vendors' software solutions, such as Absolute Software's Computrace LoJack for Laptops, can help track down the laptop.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 4060   |   Rating:ononononon  (1 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Thomas Wailgum Thomas Wailgum covers Enterprise Software, Data Management and Personal Productivity Apps for CIO.com. Follow Tom on Twitter @twailgum. Follow everything from CIO.com on Twitter @CIOonline. Email Tom at tw... more

Related Content

Wireless VPNs not as safe as you'd want
Wireless VPNs not as safe as you'd wantPeople tend to fixate on the "private" in virtual public network. Users sitting in Starbucks work on their laptops thinking they're using a VPN so it's safe. It's not. Here are some tips for the CISO or CSO on how to select a safe and secure VPN
OECD calls for global anti-malware partnership
OECD calls for global anti-malware partnershipThe Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development is urging governments and the IT industry to work together to fight malware, which it calls 'a million dollar criminal industry." Spokemen for Bell and Telus back the recommendation
Vancouver firm uses radio to teach laptop security
Vancouver firm uses radio to teach laptop securityAbsolute Software writes prepared scripts that discuss the dangers of mobile computing and how they could avoid them. IDC and Info-Tech wonder: Is this user education or fear-mongering?
All-in-one or one for each?
i’m prepping for a trip to anaheim, calif., for cisco systems’ networkers conference. at some point i have to face my stable of gadgetry and the george carlinesque conundrum: where am i gonna put all this stuff? (link here, but coarse language alert.)what do i take and what do i leave behind? the lapt
blog comments powered by Disqus