Thu Mar 15, 2007 7:04PM EDT
See Comments (319)
It sounds like a slam dunk: Put a hard drive into a standard photocopier, so (depending on the copier's configuration) you can have a digital version of anything you run through the machine. That way, if the original is ever lost, you can always run back to the backup. (I hadn't realized this, but copiers have been including hard drives for five years now.)
But now people are finally waking up to the wrinkle in this plan, which should have been obvious: What do people use copiers for, anyway? Yes, for company flyers and employee manuals, but also for tax returns, insurance cards, photo IDs, and Social Security paperwork. Now what happens when that copier gets old and is sold on eBay? Gulp. Computerworld has more of the story.
Copiers are hardly highly-secure devices, and such data could be accessed via a network connection, too.
The wake-up call is, surprisingly, being delivered by Sharp, a manufacturer of these devices. The company polled Americans and found that 54 percent of those surveyed had no idea that photocopiers stored digital versions of everything put on the glass. Count me in the majority, I guess.
What to do? Naturally, Sharp (and presumably other companies too) are promoting its newer copiers, which encrypt digitally stored copies and "virtually shred" recent ones so they can't be recovered. If you've got such features on your office machine, make sure you use them. But also remember that next time you make copies at Kinko's or another copy shop, you could be leaving behind a copy of anything you reproduce. Behave accordingly.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
The scary thing is all of the office bloopers that are played on copiers. Every body part imagined has been copied for a prank, then immediately destroyed, or so they thought.
I had NO idea ... Thank YOU for bringing this to our attention ! My intentions are to share this article with several of my friends. Thanks again ! (( Thinking: OMG! -- the office Christmas Party ! ))
Well, there is one thing to say about this; if people who steal this kind of information for a living did not know about this, they do now.
EVERY SINGLE COPIER EVER???
Most copiers and multi function devices with a hard drive are now working to or already have passed Department of Defense data storage and destruction criteria. Harvesting data over the network on most current devices is highly unlikely. At least on most Xerox and Canon machines. I can't vouch for Sharp, Ricoh, Savin and others, but it's highly likely they have something in place. Most companies and education facilities require this. Its possible that first and second gen devices that weren't updated/patched, could be susceptible to harvesting.
Okay - I have a HP Color LaserJet 2840 all in one. I bought this about six months ago and paid nearly a grand for teh thing. Does this model indeed have a hard-drive and if so, how can this be shredded/disabled. Yes, this devise is networked and accessible via the Internet - it has it's own IP Address that HP has accessed remotely when I've called for help with troubleshooting. Thank you.
The article ends with: "But also remember that next time you make copies at Kinko's or another copy shop, you could be leaving behind a copy of anything you reproduce. Behave accordingly." --Ha ha, and what would that mean? Demanding that Kinkos furnish proof that they've secured your information? Refuse to use their machines because there is no way they can fulfill that demand? Carry your own hard drive around and tear open Kinko's machine before you start copying sensitive documents?
Is there a way that I can delete the information from the copier, that I have linked to my computer at home?
redstateupdate.net watches the watchers and tracks the trackers-because we are 'one nation, under surveillance' see story- Digital Fingerprints Track Laser Printer Owner's Documents, at- http://www.redstateupdate.net/full-page/fullpage-archive-14.html www.redstateupdate.net funnny, frightening, free and 'it's all true'
That's just plain scary. I admit I've made personal copies here at work and truthfully I don't even trust the people I work with. Where can we go and feel safe????
Nope... you are screwed! Encrypt' means nothing unless the information is re-written over at least 8-9 times...
What would be the purpose of having a copy machine, store and save information of copies made.
This is true but only when you are actually scanning to your hard drive. Making copies stores absolutely no image data of your documents. I am a applications specialist for a very large copier company and for as long as there has been HDD in copiers there has been a way to encrypt and keep your buisness and personal info safe while scanning to a HDD. In fact I would go as far as saying that with all of your new security features in your pc operating systems it is still not near as locked down as a copier. Most if not all copier companies have technicians and app specialists that can ensure your copier is extreemly safe.
Actually, I think there is a website committed to butt shots...
I can't believe I have never heard about this before. I am why places like Kinkos (as well as any other "public" copying place) would not let the consumers using these machines know that someone could acess their documents via a hard drive. I am glad my printer/scanner/copier is what I use now!
Your assumption that a digital copier remembers every document is totally inaccurate,the memory in a copier is used to perform functions such as sorting or printing out a multiple page document. Many machines now have a document server which can remember documents you want to access later such as a fax cover sheet or price list. The scurity on the document server can be managed and Ricoh has a built in security feature which will three times over write the data so that it can't be extracted by someone later.
I guess I'm in trouble! I just faxed my resume to another Competition of the Company!
What about those scanner/copies that we all use at our homes? Am I now supposed to worry because of the last unit that I gave to a friend when I upgraded.
How can I be so naive? I am never drinking ever again.
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26 Posted by mderoller on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:14PM EDT Report Abuse
It's not a wakeup call for Xerox. They already handle document security.