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    What your office photocopier knows about you

    (Photo: Nicholas Veasey / Getty Images)(Photo: Nicholas Veasey / Getty Images)By Brian Clark Howard
    More from The Daily Green News blog

    Did you know that most office photocopiers are built to save digital images of documents? It's true.

    When CBS News recently purchased some used photocopiers that were destined for new customers, their computer technician was able to easily retrieve thousands of pages of sensitive documents from their hard drives: perfect images of personal medical records, pay stubs, and tax forms -- even the blueprint of a building near Ground Zero and reports of sex and drug crimes from the Buffalo, N.Y., police department. There were home addresses, social security numbers, and medical histories aplenty.

    The data isn't particularly easy to view and sort, but a thief who knows what he's looking for can download free software from the Internet that can be used to mine this treasure trove of personal data.

    Still, before you run screaming from your nearest Kinko's, there are a few things you should know.

    "It's a real issue, and it's something we've been talking about for a long time," Larry Kovnat, manager of product security for imaging company Xerox, told The Daily Green. "There have been a lot of inquiries and plans put in place to institutionalize the use of encryption and data overwrite on copiers, to protect the data," Kovnat added. Encryption encodes the data so only someone who has the "key" can make sense of it, and overwrite erases each previous scan.

    Kovnat explained that some manufacturers offer image overwrite as an optional extra (according to the CBS story, the vendor charges $500 for that). "We offer it standard because we think the issue is important," said Kovnat. "We want people to use the features, and they don't slow down the devices."

    Still, each office's machine administrator needs to know to turn the security settings on, and to make sure care is taken when the device is no longer needed. "Before you drop off that used machine to a lessor or for a charitable write-off, make sure that you have totally erased the hard disk or removed and destroyed it," cautions Peter Fannon, the vice president of technology policy for Panasonic.

    Fannon adds that Panasonic has built-in security features into all their imaging products since 2005, and that the company works to educate authorized dealers to tell users to enable them. According to Fannon, the products ship with such security features as image overwrite, encryption, hard disk lock (which prevents the drive from being used in any other device), and security passwords that prevent making unauthorized changes. However, the default setting of these features is off, so they have to be activated by the user.

    "Fax machines also have large image memories that can store a significant amount of data. To eliminate concerns about that, we have the option Panasonic Image Memory Eraser Function, which erases all fax data after each transmission, including where it is being sent, the sending number, and all data," Fannon adds. As for older copiers, Fannon said they sometimes came with a combination of physical locks and password protection.

    Neither expert was aware of a single proven case in which sensitive information was taken off a copy machine and used maliciously. Still, both recommend that consumers take precautions. As it stands, the Federal Trade Commission is currently evaluating the way manufacturers present their security procedures.

    Before copying anything sensitive, Kovnat says one should ask the administrator how the machine is set up. "Ask, does it have a disk? Is encryption enabled? Is image overwrite enabled? If you can't get a good answer, I wouldn't take the risk," explained Kovnat.

    "These are sophisticated machines; don't think of them as 'just a copier,'" he added. "You wouldn't use a laptop without thinking about security or updating software."

    [ 10 Ways to Green Your Office ]

    Recycling electronics still makes sense

    It's important to point out that legitimate security concerns should not prevent people from properly recycling old copiers and other electronic equipment.

    These devices contain valuable metals and toxic components that contribute to our growing glut of e-waste -- only about 12% of which is recycled.

    Just as with recycling computers and cell phones, the key is to make sure any data is completely erased or overwritten with junk data (use the device's deletion program, for instance, or reformat the hard drive).

    If you are not comfortable doing that, find an IT professional to help you. Most manufacturers also now offer authorized recycling drop-off locations (find recyclers with the "get local info" search on The Daily Green homepage).

    In the case of Panasonic, there are more than 650 locations around the country. "Our contractors are required to destroy or clean the data, without having access to it," said Fannon, who adds that all consumer products are broken down and recycled domestically. "In the case of commercial devices, they could conceivably be exported or resold, but before any of that happens, our contracts require, and our auditing confirms, the data is cleaned."

    More from The Daily Green:

    Reprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc


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    85 comments

    • Gravy  •  1 year 8 months ago
      I don't understand why the news agencies need to publish this. Make the industry aware of the problem so they can try to fix it. Now every darn criminal out there will be looking at used photo copiers to steal this info. Sometimes there are things that shouldn't be made public.
    • warm caramel  •  1 year 8 months ago
      this should be feature that can easily be turned on or off! listed in the user manual! come on guys not everyone wants to have a photocopying machine storing your personal files like a hard drive!
    • Anonymous  •  1 year 8 months ago
      Can you spell BIG BROTHER?
    • Danimari  •  1 year 8 months ago
      It seems to me that this is an untapped market for office buttcheeks
    • just me  •  1 year 8 months ago
      Forget all the nonsense about encpyoting the files so that only those who have a "key" can get access to them. That will just cause people to hack through if they want to and have the know how to do so. Why not just take the memory device out completely so that the copier or printer or whatever the case may be can never hold any kind of sensitive information. PROBLEM SOLVED!!!!
    • Joe  •  1 year 8 months ago
      I work on copiers for a living and i think this article looks more like an ad more then anything. It is not that easy to get infor off of an HDD. The machines I work on all have encryption software installed at the factory. My company has a strick HDD clearing policy that is more then sufficiant. Just call the number of the service company on the front of your machine if your IT guy is too "busy" to help you with your secuity setting on the machine. There are things you can do to protect your documents in house as well.
    • Amy B  •  1 year 8 months ago
      I wish this went into a bit more detail about what can be done. Our IT department is way too busy to come over and change a copier setting or show us how, and I'm not about to try to figure it out myself because I might mess someting up.
    • BobDiaz  •  1 year 8 months ago
      This is a good example of BAD DESIGN. Once the copy is made, there is no logical reason to save the image on the hard drive. The next copy made should overwrite the first image.
    • Holly  •  1 year 8 months ago
      Who says it hasn't been used? You think all criminals have been caught? How about this... what is your local gov't throwing in the dumpster?? I had an instance where someone had taken items that belonged in the library and tossed them in the dumpster, so me and another went after them. While we were there we found tons of records from the township hall (it was a shared dumpster with the library - small town). These records may not have sounded like much, voter registration cards, but they had name, birthdate, address, signature. And if you put them together, you have a nice collection of the whole house. Then in another box were files after files of land records. Many of these files had social security numbers. Now put the two together. In the wrong hands these could be the start of a great identity theft project. It all boils down to this: I want to be in control over my own personal information as much as possible. I've already had to deal with a babysitter that rifled thru my file cabinet and got herself a cellphone and credit card in my name.
    • RobertR  •  1 year 8 months ago
      see what my Brother-In-Laws father does..... http://cbs13.com/local/tony.lopez.Keeping.2.1471827.html

      NOT HYPE...
    • kevin  •  1 year 8 months ago
      I recently leased three copiers with Carr Business Systems. They have great green initiatives and amazing service. Call them if you need any copiers !
    •   •  1 year 8 months ago
      So what you are telling me that it has copies of my a.s.s. and ball sack that I would slide under the bosses office door for making me work late because of his screw up?
    • Anonymous  •  1 year 8 months ago
      Can you spell BIG BROTHER?
    • Ashley  •  1 year 8 months ago
      Thanks again yahoo for giving the criminals of the world a way to be even better criminals!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 year 8 months ago
      It took people this long to figure it out. I figured this out years ago and already figured out that some printers on eBay were undoubtedly being purchased by people looking to harvest the information contained within for identity theft. People are way behind, if i can think of this kind of thing long before it's news don't you think people with more nefarious intentions can too? A lot of IT people need to start thinking thinking in terms of, If i were a criminal what would i do instead of waiting for someone to tell them what the current big scam is, if you can't do that you should hire a security expert every now and then to go through and tell you where your security is weak.
    • Mrs. W  •  1 year 8 months ago
      What I want to know....does this same thing happen with printers in our offices? Do networked printers store their information somewhere? It seems to me if so, then the same security risk is being stored on either the printers or a database somewhere....anyone know??
    • Lizarrd  •  1 year 8 months ago
      I work for a copier company. We supply all the copiers to Virginia Tech. When this report aired VT was worried about their info. We allowed them to take one of their hard drives and try to get any info from it. They used their IT team as well as their engineering dept. They had the hard drive for two weeks and could not get any info from it.
    • ReneeC  •  1 year 8 months ago
      "Neither expert was aware of a single proven case in which sensitive information was taken off a copy machine and used maliciously."

      But wait! Didn't this article just tell people that it could be done and a basic understanding of how to do it?
    • Josh  •  1 year 8 months ago
      I honestly never knew this and as an IT student and a aspiring system/network admin I am shamed to my very core. I thank you Shine and YahooGreen because you have helped me become a better IT person with this.
    • Richard  •  1 year 8 months ago
      This is a sensational story with very little in the way of meaningful information. The reality is that digital copiers use hard drives in the same way that printers use RAM memory; once the print job is done they purge / delete the images that were created. The images are only available for a short time (depending on how much use the copier gets) as they are typically overwritten fairly quickly.

      All the digital copier manufacturers offer "digital file shredding" software, there are only a few that provide it for free.

      Keep an eye out for my article about this subject coming soon on Law.com. I explain what really happens and how it is retained by the copier and how it is ultimately destroyed.

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