Telephone Eavesdropping and Detection

American Society for Industrial Security / PricewaterhouseCoopers

Trends in Proprietary Information Loss Survey Report 2002

U.S. companies worried about hackers stealing their trade secrets should be even more afraid of former employees, competitors and contractors, according to a new study.

Intellectual property and proprietary information are more at risk from ex-employees, foreign and domestic competitors and contractors working on-site than from computer hackers, according to a study released this week PricewaterhouseCoopers, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Society for Industrial Security (ASIS) International.

Losses Hit $59 Billion

The study, titled "Trends in proprietary information loss," defines proprietary information and intellectual property as "information that is not within the public domain and which the owner has taken some measures to protect." It refers to, for example, information about new products and services.

"The 'insider' threat problem is perceived to be the most serious. This means that companies may want to consider investing more in human resources and vendor screening processes, as well as educating employees about tools and techniques to upgrade their information technology security practices," the study reads. The study's findings are based on survey responses from 138 chief executive officers of

U.S. companies of all sizes. Respondents were asked about intellectual property and proprietary information losses incurred between July 1, 2000 and June 30, 2001 . About 40 percent of the companies polled reported suffering the loss of this type of confidential information. Based on the survey responses, the study concluded that U.S. companies suffered up to $59 billion in intellectual property and proprietary information losses between July 2000 and June 2001. Most of those losses resulted from legal fees and lost revenue associated with the theft of this privileged information. Areas affected included research and development, customer information and financial data.

For more information about this survey please go to: http://www.asisonline.org/newsroom/surveys/spi2.pdf

Industrial Espionage - Learn More

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