Computerworld

Corporate data slips out via Google calendar

Sensitive data from companies like McKinsey and JPMorgan Chase can be found using Google Calendar Search

It's not clear what gets discussed during McKinsey & Co.'s weekly internal communication meeting, but the dial-in number and passcode for the event can be easily found by searching with Google.

The data is out there thanks to the Search Google Calendar a feature added to Google's Web-based calendar service last November. Google bills it as a cool way to discover interesting events, but a few quick searches show that it can also be used to turn up sensitive corporate information that was inadvertently made public using Google Calendar.

Launched last year as part of Google's effort to develop a series of Web-based productivity applications, Google Calendar gives users the choice of keeping calendar entries private or publishing them for the world to see, but some Google Calendar users appear to be sharing their calendar information without realizing it. The McKinsey dial-in information, for example, was posted by a single person who had shared a number of calendar events including project status meetings and call in numbers for the company's "McKwiki Weekly," project.

McKinsey spokesman Mitch Kent confirmed that the name on the Google Calendar matched that of a McKinsey employee in the company's IT department. McKinsey employees do not "use Google calendar on a regular basis," he added.

Further searching revealed that quite a few corporate calendars can be found on Google Calendar yielding such tidbits as the date and time of vendor meetings and names of projects in the works. Dial information could also be seen Tuesday on other calendars for calls on topics such as "Deloitte's V2 Status Meeting- Updated" and "Compliance Overview."

Details for several JPMorgan Chase & Co. conference calls relating to the company's storage systems, including a dial-in number and passcode for a May 3 call to discuss a "SAN Security Remediation Project," also could be seen publicly. The Google Calendar user who posted the JPMorgan information could not be reached for comment.

"This is pretty much exactly the kind of recon necessary to start doing industrial espionage," wrote Robert Hansen, the CEO of Sectheory.com, when he first blogged about this issue on Tuesday. "Weekly meetings that discuss key internal information? Not looking good. Sometimes you see major leaks in the least likely places."

This kind of data leakage is a growing problem for corporations, whose employees are adopting a new generation of Web-based productivity tools without necessarily understanding the security implications, said Marv Goldschmitt, vice president of business development with data auditing appliance vendor Tizor Systems Inc. "People may not understand what it means to put their information on a public service."

Google Calendar gives users three way of publishing calendar entries: "Default," "private," and "public." But the company needs to make it very clear to users when they are posting information to the public, or face the risk of being blamed for its users' mistakes.

This could happen if news of a corporate acquisition were leaked via Google Calendar, he said. "That would have been a case of misuse by the user, but is the public going to read it as that, or are they going to read it as now they don't trust Google?"

Google representatives did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

More about: Google, VIA

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the Computerworld comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
Recent Discussions
Whitepapers
All whitepapers
tracking pixel
 
Computerworld Community Comments
Zones
SAS Resource Centre

This Resource Centre hosts a wealth of thought leadership articles, whitepapers, and success videos, to help you make the most out of your corporate information in order to swiftly make sound business decisions to survive and thrive in the current economic climate.

Oracle Resource Centre

News, Features and the latest whitepapers on SOA, Application Grid, Enterprise Management and Database

Sponsored Links
 
Back to top Sitemap
Copyright 2009 IDG Communications. ABN 14 001 592 650. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of IDG Communications is prohibited.