September - Disaster Preparedness for Personal Information Assets
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Disaster Preparedness for Personal
Information Assets
September is “Disaster Preparedness
Month.” It’s important to consider how we safeguard our
information in the event of a natural disaster, man-made event, or even
a system failure. This newsletter will discuss some steps you can
take to secure your critical information and some best practices to
make information security part of daily life.
What are some steps to safeguard
physical forms of information?
Store all important documents in a secure and preferably
fireproof, waterproof and portable container, as well as maintain a
copy at an off-site location. Below is a list developed by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) of important
documents:
• Insurance policies, wills, contracts, deeds, stocks
and bonds
• Photo IDs, passports, social security cards,
immunization records
• Bank account numbers
• Credit card account numbers and companies
• Inventory of valuable household goods, important
telephone numbers
• Family records (birth, marriage, death
certificates)
• Photocopies of credit and identification
cards
What about digital
information?
While the above items of information are maintained in a physical form,
what about other important information stored in a digital form?
This includes items such as any family photos, electronic billing and
account information you maintain on your computer, list of contact
information for family and friends, and any important projects you are
working on your computer (such as family budgets, retirement planning
information, construction plans, and other items that are difficult to
rebuild or replace). You may be saving these pieces of
information to your computer’s hard drive, but if there is a flood or a
hard drive failure this information may be lost forever. It is
important to back up this same information, however you can choose
different methods. Some methods include:
• Flash drives and portable hard drives represent a
way to back up important information on smaller and more portable
devices. These can be stored in your fire proof, waterproof and
portable container or at a separate location (safe deposit box,
etc.).
• You may consider using an email or online service
to store some key documents.
• Consider backing up your phone as well. Most major
phone providers and email services offer free or low cost contact
backup services.
How to ensure your information is always protected?
It’s important to make saving and storing your information a regular
habit. Keep in mind that you may not be able to store everything, but
make sure you save critical information with regularity. Below
are some tips for making sure you are keeping your information
protected in the event of a disaster:
Physical forms:
• When you change your insurance policy or update
your identification, make a copy and place it in your emergency storage
that day.
• Twice a year inventory your emergency storage and
remove out-of-date or non-relevant information and add updated
information.
• Once a year, check that all documents at off-site
storage are up-to-date.
Digital forms:
• Save all files to your external storage (or online
service) on a regular basis.
• Back up your hard drive frequently (daily, weekly,
or monthly).
• Annually, review all files on external storage;
remove ones that are no longer needed.
Additional Information
Ready America:
ready.gov/index.html
FEMA: Assemble a Disaster Supplies
Kit:
fema.gov/plan/prepare/supplykit.shtm
redcross.org/preparedness/FinRecovery/FinPlan/records.html#homesafe
For more monthly cyber security newsletter tips visit: http://www.msisac.org/awareness/news/
