{"id":13295,"date":"2017-10-30T20:40:58","date_gmt":"2017-10-30T20:40:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/digital-sentinel.com\/?p=13295"},"modified":"2020-02-01T11:39:52","modified_gmt":"2020-02-01T11:39:52","slug":"discarded-usb-stick-included-security-protocols-queens-travel","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digital-sentinel.com\/breach\/leaked-document\/discarded-usb-stick-included-security-protocols-queens-travel\/","title":{"rendered":"Discarded USB stick included security protocols for Queen’s travel"},"content":{"rendered":"
A man found a USB stick on the street in London which had confidential security information about Heathrow’s airports last weekend.<\/p>\n
Classified information regarding security protocols at Heathrow airport was discovered on a USB stick discarded on a London street over the weekend.<\/p>\n
The memory stick contained an unencrypted 2.5GB of data with 76 folders with maps, videos and documents, and didn’t require a password to access the information, according to The Mirror<\/em><\/a>, which was given the USB stick.<\/p>\n There were at least 174 documents with some marked as “confidential” or “restricted” but which could still be read.<\/p>\n It even contained information about the route the Queen takes when using the airport and security measures used to protect her, files disclosing every type of ID needed to access restricted areas, and a timetable of patrols used to guard the site against terror attacks.<\/p>\n Furthermore, the stick,\u00a0found on the pavement of Ilbert Street in Queen’s Park,\u00a0contained maps showing the location of CCTV cameras, routes and safeguards for cabinet ministers and foreign dignitaries and details of the ultrasound radar system used to scan runways and the perimeter fence.<\/p>\n Airport insiders were trying to determine if there had been an “incompetent data breach” or if the files had been accessed intentionally, according to The\u00a0<\/em> Mirror<\/em>.<\/p>\n The information was passed onto Heathrow intelligence chiefs and the man who found it has been interviewed by airport security chiefs.<\/p>\n