June 2008 Entries
FAQs on Data De-dupe Technologies - June 29, 2008
Orlando Florida -- In the storage business, data deduplication is all the rage. Our customers are clamoring to cash in on the savings, but most don't yet understand how to properly apply the technology to their environment. Sencilo Solutions can help customers sort through the three basic approaches and extract real value from data deduplication quickly will earn the trust of clients and gain lasting business.
As you know, deduplication offers a number of improvements over traditional storage for backups. But with those benefits comes a confusing set of questions from customers, the key question being: How do we choose the best dedupe technology? In answering that question, it's important not to jump ahead to focus on specific products -- by first choosing product type, whether it be host-based, VTL-based or NAS-based, Sencilo Solutions can simplify the decision process our customers. Here's how they break down.
Host-based data deduplication
Host-based deduplication requires the backup client to do a lot of the dedupe work. In many cases, that's not a problem, especially when the client is not CPU-bound. Host-based dedupe really helps when backup bandwidth is constrained by small wide area network (WAN) pipes or consolidated virtual servers.
Host-based data deduplication solutions usually require us to replace traditional backup software with the dedupe backup software, so before we recommend such a change, make sure that the benefits are significant enough.
Brian McCarthy President of Sencilo Solutions of Lake Mary Florida a reseller that specializes in Backup and Archive products and services. "Remote office backups to the corporate site will benefit from Avamar's host-based deduplication because it eliminates most or all of the backup hardware located at the remote site and optimizes the network bandwidth required to centralize backups to corporate data centers", says McCarthy. VMware backups benefit from host-based deduplication by limiting the network bandwidth required to back up multiple guest machines concurrently.
Some of the examples of host-based data deduplication technology include EMC Avamar and Symantec NetBackup PureDisk. See - http://www.sencilo.com/storage-data-deduplication.php
Virtual tape library (VTL) data deduplication
Deduped virtual tape libraries (VTLs) work well when the backups are localized to the data center and/or bandwidth between the client and backup storage is not an issue. Naturally, many customers will want to take advantage of deduplication in their existing or planned virtual tape infrastructure. VTLs are already very common in midsized and large enterprises and consume a significant part of many companies' overall storage budget. Deduping at the VTL should be simple for customers because almost all backup software platforms support VTLs. In addition, deduped VTLs are a good fit for disaster recovery replication and when the customer wants to replace tape for primary backups. Given the increased efficiency and deduped VTL-to-VTL replication, there may finally be an opportunity to show real ROI for backup to disk instead of tape.
Examples of VTL dedupe technology include EMC DL3D, Sepaton S2100 and Quantum DXi Series.
Primary network-attached storage (NAS) data deduplication
VTLs introduce a lot of the same challenges that physical tape presents, such as tape contention, poor cartridge utilization and intolerance to high storage area network (SAN) latencies. In some cases, customers want the benefits of target hardware-based deduplication without the complexity and limitations of tape. In these cases, deduped NAS file systems may be the perfect remedy. Deduped NAS storage has some impressive cost advantages because it doesn't require SAN connections or VTL licensing in the backup software. In some cases, the deduped NAS storage can be used for more than just backups, such as highly duplicate archive data where throughput is less important than space savings.
Examples of NAS data deduplication technology include NetApp NearStore with Advanced Single Instance Store (ASIS), Data Domain's DD Series, EMC's DL1500 and Quantum DXi-series appliances.
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/storage-data-deduplication.php
About Us
Sencilo Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in storage and security solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, EMC, Juniper Networks, Hitachi, Symantec, Barracuda Networks, and HP. Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses. Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, Miami, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Ocala, Palm Coast, Clearwater, Kissimmee, Lakeland, Maitland and Cape Canaveral
Offerings Projects: Replication De-Dup De-Dupe iSCSI SAN NAS VMware Security EMC NetApp HP IBM Quantum Compliance VTL Data Domain vs Gartner Magic Quadrant Quadrent LTO Backup Exc Pure Disk NetBackup Networker TSM Commvault BakBone D2D D2D2T compare cloud data deduplication thin provisioning DXi Global Compression DDX virtual tape library Data Reduction SEPATON FALCON compare Celerra CLARiiON Equallogic Dell NS20 NS40 CX4 CX3-20 CX3-40 CX3-80 FAS2050 FAS3050 Xiotech Nexsan Avamar DLD3 1500 D3 Storwiz storage compression data Ocarina Networks A-SIS compare Sepaton infopro BlueArc OnStor Microsoft Unified Storage data protection StorageX Brocade FAQ
University of Utah lost 2.2 million Health Care and Social Security Records - June 26, 2008
Courier violated protocol, taking data home instead of directly to off-site storage facility
Orlando Florida -- University of Utah officials this week acknowledged that a metal box of backup tapes containing billing records of some 2.2 million patients was stolen early this month from the car of a courier who left it in a parked car overnight outside his home.
The missing tapes were taken on June 2 from the car of an employee of Perpetual Storage Inc., an independent storage company hired by the university to transport its computer tapes to off-site facilities, said school officials. The tapes contained names, demographic information and Social Security numbers of patients of the University of Utah Hospitals & Clinics.
The health care system has suspended all backup tape deliveries to Perpetual Storage pending a full review of the company's protocols and procedures, said a university spokeswoman.
The spokeswoman confirmed that Perpetual Storage fired the individual involved with the data breach for violating company data security transportation protocols. The driver had been employed by Perpetual Storage for 18 years, she said.
The spokeswoman said the driver informed his employer immediately upon discovering that the tapes were lost. Perpetual Storage informed the University of Utah Hospitals & Clinics officials within 24 hours of the breach, she added.
Perpetual Storage did not immediately return calls by Computerworld seeking comment.
The university spokeswoman declined to say whether any of the missing data storage tapes were encrypted.
Lorris Betz, senior vice president for health sciences and CEO of University of Utah Health & Clinics, said in a posted alert that it's unlikely that any information on the backup tapes will be exposed to thieves. "Although it is unlikely that information on the tapes will be compromised, we are nevertheless taking aggressive steps to protect our patients' confidentiality," Betz said in the post. "Not true" says Brian McCarthy President of Sencilo Solutions and well known speak of backup and security, "if their tapes do not contain encryption any one with a tape drive can read the files."
The university plans to mail notification letters to all patients whose data was held on the stolen tapes and offer them free credit-monitoring services. The missing tapes did not hold any credit card information, noted school officials.
The university is offering a reward of $1,000 for the return of the stolen tapes with "no questions asked." The Salt Lake County Sheriff's Department, the FBI and U.S. Postal Service are investigating the theft.
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/security-compliance-management.php
About Us
Sencilo Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in storage, security and networking solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, EMC, NetApp, Juniper Networks, Hitachi, Symantec, Barracuda Networks, and HP. Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses. Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Ocala, Palm Coast, Kissimmee, Lakeland, Maitland, Cape Canaveral, Lake Mary
Other products include Barracuda Networks Security RSA Encryption Cisco Decru Neoscale EMC NetApp Compliance vs. Gartner Magic Quadrant SSL SonicWall Secure Computing Firewall VPN Endpoint DLP Tumbleweed Ironmail Ironport Secure Computing compare data leakage enVision Data Loss Prevention Encryption and Key Management CA Symantec Juniper
EMC CLARiiON CX now shipping with Solid-State Drives (SSD) - June 20, 2008
Orlando Florida -- EMC Corp. will add a new Clariion midrange storage array with solid-state drives (SSD) over the next few months, SearchStorage.com has learned. EMC began offering SSD in its enterprise Symmetrix systems earlier this year, and industry sources say that EMC will extend its support of SSD technology with the Clariion CX4-80, which is expected to be generally available in August. Brian McCarthy President and EMC Partner stated "tier 0 is long over do, and welcomes moving his client based to this new technology".
One source familiar with the SSD-supported Clariion arrays said the latest versions of Symmetrix and Clariion arrays share hardware components, including disk trays and outer skins. This makes it relatively simple for EMC to slot SSDs into the Clariion now that it's been done for Symmetrix.
EMC would neither confirm nor deny the rumors about the Clariion CX4-80, issuing a statement saying, "At EMC World, we spoke about the many benefits of flash technology, EMC's investment in testing and qualification, and that we would incorporate it into our product portfolio where it made the most sense. Beyond that, we are not going to be able to provide any specifics as to announcements, products or time frames."
Since EMC pledged in January to support SSDs in Symmetrix, other vendors, including Xiotech, FalconStor, Nimbus Data Systems, Hitachi Data Systems, NetApp and Sun, have also said they would support SSDs in enterprise storage arrays. That leaves Hewlett-Packard and IBM as the two major players who have yet to divulge their plans regarding SSDs in enterprise storage arrays. HP and IBM are still playing catch up on so many fronts, done look for SSD any time soon, stated McCarthy.
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/
Sencilo Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in storage and security solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, EMC, Juniper Networks, Hitachi, Symantec, Barracuda Networks, and HP. Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses. Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, Miami, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Ocala, Palm Coast, Clearwater, Kissimmee, Lakeland, Maitland and Cape Canaveral
Offerings Projects: Replication De-Dup De-Dupe iSCSI SAN NAS VMware Security EMC NetApp HP IBM Quantum Compliance VTL Data Domain vs Gartner Magic Quadrant Quadrent LTO Backup Exc Pure Disk NetBackup Networker TSM Commvault BakBone D2D D2D2T compare cloud data deduplication thin provisioning DXi Global Compression DDX virtual tape library Data Reduction SEPATON FALCON compare Celerra CLARiiON Equallogic Dell NS20 NS40 CX4 CX3-20 CX3-40 CX3-80 FAS2050 FAS3050 Xiotech Nexsan Avamar DLD3 1500 D3 Storwiz storage compression data Ocarina Networks A-SIS compare Sepaton infopro BlueArc OnStor Microsoft Unified Storage data protection StorageX Brocade FAQ
Where will it end? PCI compliance now extends to POS car washes, quick lubes - June 17, 2008
When Innive Systems, Inc., began integrating credit card clearing into its point-of-sale systems for car washes by connecting to a credit card clearinghouse over the Internet, executives at the company knew they had to do something to protect the machines.
At first, they advised their customers to install antivirus software. But over time, it became clear the customers weren't heeding their advice: Support calls soared as machines became infected with viruses and other malware. The outbreaks would prevent the vendor's POS applications, which are integrated with the car wash tunnel operations, from running and disrupt business. Support technicians spent hours cleaning up customers' systems.
"It really led us to look at the fact that they weren't being proactive in protecting themselves so we had to look for a solution," said Joe Jennings, network administrator at Daytona Beach Florida-based Innive Systems.
The company began looking for software that would work with its application and provide affordable protection for its customers. Jennings and his team put seven antivirus products to the test on a POS system. They threw viruses and spyware at each, and looked at how fast they allowed the Innive Systems application to run.
"We went through the entire gambit with each one," Jennings said.
In the POS world, anything that slows down the ability to produce a receipt is unacceptable, he explained. "You don't want customers standing there waiting for anything." In that respect, Barracuda Antivirus, stood out from the others. With it, a receipt popped out in less than half a second. CA's antivirus caused the longest lag at 20 seconds, Jennings said.
Jennings and his team also liked Barracuda proactive capabilities in blocking malware, its integrated anti-spyware protection, Eset's automatic updates, and low price. The initial plan was to resell the antivirus protection to customers, but with the PCI Data Security Standard becoming a concern, the company's president decided that it needed to be included with every POS system, Jennings said.
By including the antivirus protection with its systems, Innive Systems is helping its customers at nearly 3,000 car wash and quick lube locations comply with the PCI standard, Jennings said. Barracuda, which is installed with the POS server in active scanning mode for real-time protection, prevents viruses, Trojans or other malware from reading or extracting any of the data flowing from the POS device and server to the credit card clearinghouse, he said. No credit card data is stored on the POS device or server, he added.
The need to secure POS systems was highlighted in the recent indictment of three men on charges of hacking into computer systems at 11 Dave & Buster's restaurants and stealing credit and debit card numbers. The trio allegedly gained unauthorized access to the POS servers at each restaurant and installed packet sniffers designed to capture credit card data.
Security expert Brian McCarthy of Sencilo Solutions in Longwood Florida have said "a common security problem at retail locations are POS systems that are managed by third parties via unsecured remote access systems that often use blank or default passwords."
In addition to providing antivirus protection with its POS solutions, Innive Systems ships to each customer a router that's configured securely, without any standard open ports. And even before PCI compliance became an issue, the company realized it needed to replace its remote support solution for managing client machines with a more secure system, Jennings said. It chose the Bomgar Box, which he described as a secure, encrypted point-to-point system; no standard passwords are used and Jennings requires frequent password changes for employees.
In addition, Innovive Systems is working to get its software validated under the new Payment Application Data Security Standard. FL-DSS is based largely on Visa's Payment Application Best Practices (PABP) program.
Since the vendor starting shipping every system with Barracuda, calls to its support team about viruses and other problems dropped tremendously, Jennings said. The company also replaced its Symantec and Webroot Software antivirus products with antivirus on its corporate network.
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/security-compliance-management.php
About Us
Sencilo Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in storage, security and networking solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, EMC, NetApp, Juniper Networks, Hitachi, Symantec, Barracuda Networks, and HP. Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses. Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, Miami, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Ocala, Palm Coast, Clearwater, Kissimmee, Lakeland, Maitland, Cape Canaveral
Key words: Barracuda Networks Security RSA Encryption Cisco Decru Neoscale EMC NetApp Compliance vs. Gartner Magic Quadrant SSL SonicWall Secure Computing Firewall VPN Endpoint DLP Tumbleweed Ironmail Ironport Secure Computing compare data leakage enVision Data Loss Prevention Encryption and Key Management CA Symantec Juniper
The Next Generation of Backup will include incremental backups and CDP for VMware - June 13, 2008
Orlando Florida -- Symantec Corp. boosted its support for VMware's products in two new incremental releases for NetBackup at Symantec Vision.
The updates to NetBackup come as part of two new "double-dot" releases, NetBackup 6.5.2, which is available immediately and NetBackup 6.5.3, which is expected later this summer. "We have a new release model for NetBackup," said Matt Kixmoeller, vice president of product management for Symantec. "We're looking to get innovations to market faster, rather than just having an enormous big-bang release every few years."
Support for incremental and parallel snapshots of VMware hosts through NetBackup's VMware Consolidated Backup (VCB) integration are the main new features of the NetBackup 6.5.2 release, which also includes CDP and complete integration with PureDisk's data deduplication.
"On the large scale, the XenServer platform has some fundamental advantages," said Rob Soderberry, senior vice president for Symantec's storage and availability management group. "Our strategy is to create the best possible exploitation of the XenServer and VMware stack, and let customers and clients decide what they want to pursue."
Symantec is adding granular recovery technology into NetBackup. The feature was first incorporated into its product line with Backup Exec 11d, which allows unique object recovery from a single backup instead of through a secondary redundant backup that forced customers to use twice the space and time for backups if they wanted granular restores. Version 6.5.2 will make the feature available for Windows hosts, VMware hosts, and SharePoint Portal. Exchange integration will follow in NetBackup 6.5.3.
"Most snapshots, including Microsoft's VSS, don't allow you to get a file directly out without restoring the full snapshot," said analyst Lauren Whitehouse, Enterprise Strategy Group. "That feature puts Symantec a step above even Microsoft and other VCB integrations at this point."
NetBackup customer Eddy Navarro, a storage computer systems manager for J. Craig Venter Institute, said he's been waiting for the ability to schedule multiple concurrent snapshots of VMware hosts. "[In previous versions], NetBackup purposely set a cap on concurrent snapshots, meaning you could only schedule one at a time," Navarro said. This was done to avoid overwhelming environments that couldn't handle the load of parallel snapshots. "But, we have the infrastructure that can handle it," Navarro added.
Navarro said he's also looking forward to support for NDMP backups to disk in the new version. He wants that for his NetApp filers. While there might be ways to make the NAS backup standard dump directly to disk, Navarro wasn't familiar with them and wants all backups done through one portal. "I don't want to have to go back when I want to do a restore and say, now which way did I back this up?" he said.
New CDP, data deduplication integration
NetBackup 6.5.2 will also include the first integration with Symantec's CDP software acquired from Revivio in late 2006 and renamed RealTime 6.5.
NetBackup will be able to request snapshots from RealTime, but it will otherwise use a separate repository and interface until NetBackup 7.0 is released next year. While a new "NetBackup-like" interface on RealTime lays the groundwork for an integrated GUI, the repository will probably remain separate because Symantec expects users to deploy the "copy every write" software sparingly, according to Kixmoeller.
"The first generation of CDP struggled because there wasn't enough deep integration with applications," he said. With this re-release of Revivio's IP, NetBackup agents running on application servers will create pointers to quiesced snapshot copies in the CDP stream. The catalog of files and recovery screens will also be done in NetBackup.
Symantec has yet to integrate CDP with replication, another item on its roadmap since last year. "Symantec supports several replication products," said senior analyst Eric Burgener, Taneja Group. "Depending on how replication is linked into the CDP process, it can make it difficult to unlink it and use it with something else."
NetBackup 6.5.2 also completes an integration process between NetBackup and Symantec's PureDisk data deduplication software that has been ongoing since NetBackup 6.1. PureDisk agents can now perform data deduplication at the client, backup media server or target. Symantec is also supporting a stack of PureDisk, Veritas Cluster Server and Storage Foundation to create a grid architecture for post-process data deduplication on the target side.
While this stack of licenses could get confusing, the number of options Symantec is offering is more important, Whitehouse said. "It allows you to coordinate your backup strategy to your workload." "And, setting up various agents is a process you only do once."
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/storage-data-deduplication.php
About Us
Sencilo Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in storage and security solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, EMC, Juniper Networks, Hitachi, Symantec, Barracuda Networks, and HP. Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses. Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, Miami, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Ocala, Palm Coast, Clearwater, Kissimmee, Lakeland, Maitland and Cape Canaveral
Offerings Projects: Replication De-Dup De-Dupe iSCSI SAN NAS VMware Security EMC NetApp HP IBM Quantum Compliance VTL Data Domain vs Gartner Magic Quadrant Quadrent LTO Backup Exc Pure Disk NetBackup Networker TSM Commvault BakBone D2D D2D2T compare cloud data deduplication thin provisioning DXi Global Compression DDX virtual tape library Data Reduction SEPATON FALCON compare Celerra CLARiiON Equallogic Dell NS20 NS40 CX4 CX3-20 CX3-40 CX3-80 FAS2050 FAS3050 Xiotech Nexsan Avamar DLD3 1500 D3 Storwiz storage compression data Ocarina Networks A-SIS compare Sepaton infopro BlueArc OnStor Microsoft Unified Storage data protection StorageX Brocade FAQ
CEO fired after major data lost! - June 7, 2008
The practice of sending across the country unencrypted, CD-based files on millions of child benefit claimants could have continued indefinitely if the discs hadn't gone missing, we have learned.
Orlando Florida -- Seven months before the CDs went missing, HM Revenue and Customs had already established a practice of transferring onto CD, for despatch by post, insecure, though password-protected, files on millions of child benefit claimants.
The lost discs contained details of all child benefit recipients: records for 25 million individuals and more than seven million families.
The records included parental names, addresses, dates of birth, child benefit and national insurance numbers and where relevant bank or building society details. Paul Gray, the chairman of HM Revenue and Customs, has resigned because of the incident. This is not uncommon to see CXOs being asked to resign because of a data lost on their watch, after all it's the CXO who is signing or cutting the IT budget, say Brian McCarthy President and well know Security Consultant for Sencilo Solutions based in Orlando Florida.
The practice of transferring all of the child benefit data onto CDs began in March this year after HMRC's auditor, the National Audit Office (NAO), ceased to accept sample records for its audit of the department's accounts.
In the past officials at the Department for Work and Pensions had selected sample child benefit files and passed these to the NAO whose auditors checked for possible fraud and error.
But in March this year, for an audit of HM Revenue and Customs's 2006/7 Resource Accounts, the NAO, to do a more robustly independent check on the child benefit data, requested a full copy of the details of claimants, not merely a part of the data that had been selected by the department.
Though HMRC does have rules on handling sensitive data, it is unclear whether it had specific, established procedures for handling the request of the National Audit Office.
Aware that the files on child benefit claimants were sensitive, the NAO in March 2007 asked that HMRC filter the information before sending it to the audit office. The National Audit Office asked for the child benefit records to be stripped of details of the parents, addresses and bank information, which McCarthy states is a best practice here in the States.
HM Revenue and Customs replied that it could not do this - its systems were not sufficiently flexible. It explained it could download only the whole of the information. So it sent to the NAO, by courier-post, all of the details of parents and children, including some bank account details. Not true states McCarthy, their are disk based encryption appliances on the market today which can protect anything from a USB hard drive to tapes, HM has their heads in the sand.
That was when the insecure practice began of HMRC sending unencrypted files to the National Audit Office. No alarm bells were raised over the practice in March 2007.
It appears that it was thought easier to send the claimant files on CD than trying to send them electronically. This raises questions about whether government departments are routinely sending CDs with sensitive data around the country, thus avoiding technical challenges and security restrictions on exchanging files electronically. Easier, how is anything that is a manual process and the cost of mailing a disc easier?
So in March 2007 HM Revenue and Customs transferred the child benefit data onto CDs and sent them by courier-post from Washington, Tyne and Wear, to the National Audit Office which is near Victoria Station in London. They arrived safely - and the practice became established.
The data was sent to the NAO only partially formatted. It had to be loaded on the National Audit Office's mainframe systems before it could be manipulated.
In October this year, when the NAO wanted to do an audit of HMRC's 2007/08 Resource Accounts, it again asked the department for its child benefit data.
The sequence of events:
2 October 2007: The NAO formally asks HM Revenue and Customs for files on child benefit claimants.
18 October: HMRC tells the NAO that the CDs have been sent
24 October: The NAO informs HMRC that the discs have not arrived. The NAO asks for a second set to be sent - it needs them urgently to ensure an audit of HMRC's accounts is not delayed.
25 October: The NAO confirms receipt of the second set of discs. It staff point out that the first set has still not arrived.
5 November: HM Revenue and Customs confirms that the first set of CDs is still missing.
8 November: The NAO begins a search for the missing CDs and the loss of the data is raised formally as a security incident. It is only at this point that HMRC's senior management is informed - but not the Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling who is responsible for HMRC.
10 November: HMRC with the cooperation of the NAO begins a search for the CDs at the offices of the audit office at Victoria. The NAO has no record of having received the first set of CDs. Only now is Alistair Darling, the chancellor, informed.
11 November: HM Revenue and Customs and the police search the NAO's offices. Nothing is found.
20 November: Alistair Darling makes a statement to the House of Commons on the missing discs and Paul Gray, the chairman of HMRC resigns.
21 November: HM Revenue and Customs issues an apology.
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/security-compliance-management.php
About Us
Sencilo Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in storage, security and networking solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, EMC, NetApp, Juniper Networks, Hitachi, Symantec, Barracuda Networks, and HP.
Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses.
Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Miami, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, Fort Lauderdale, Tallahassee, Cape Coral, and Pembroke Pines.
Key words: Barracuda Networks Security RSA Encryption Cisco Decru Neoscale EMC NetApp HP IBM Quantum Compliance VTL Data Domain vs Gartner Magic Quadrant SSL SonicWall Secure Computing Firewall VPN Endpoint DLP Tumbleweed Ironmail Ironport Secure Computing compare data leakage enVision Data Loss Prevention Encryption and Key Management



