And as one might expect, the company is a target for spammers gunning for the mailing-list mother lode. In July, the owner of a spam company called Snipermail, Scott Levine, of Boca Raton, Fla., was indicted for allegedly stealing 8.2 gigabytes of data valued at more than $7 million from Acxiom between April 2002 and August 2003, the largest theft of personal data to date, according to federal officials. Levine's involvement came to light during a separate investigation of an Ohio resident who also had accessed Acxiom's external FTP server illegally to steal data.
Late last year Acxiom created a chief security leader position and named Frank Caserta, previously a senior technical adviser in the database and data warehouse group, to the post. Caserta says his job is to make sure Acxiom has a centralized, strategic view of data-security issues and to champion best data-security practices within Acxiom and among its clients.
In response to the hacking incidents, Acxiom changed its password structures, and reduced the amount of time data resides on its FTP servers. Also, Acxiom has gotten religion about data encryption: About 75% of all data flowing between Acxiom and its clients is now encrypted, and Acxiom is leaning on its clients to make that 100%.
"True Grid: Acxiom Outgrows Symmetric Multiprocessing"
"Acxiom's Cult Of Personality: Charles Morgan, Company Leader"
and "Acxiom Privacy Leader Jennifer Barrett: A Few Questions"
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