New York’s Stony Brook University has admitted it mistakenly published the personal information of nearly 90,000 faculty members, students and alumni online.
University officials acknowledged the blunder to those affected in a letter dated May 7.
Stony Brook University has admitted it mistakenly published the personal information of nearly 90,000 faculty members, students and alumni online. A letter sent to those affected said that during an overhaul of the Health Sciences Center library Web site, a long-dormant file was made public. It held names and Social Security numbers of 89,853 current and former faculty, staff, students, alumni and others.
May 24, 2007 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
New York’s Stony Brook University has admitted it mistakenly published the personal information of nearly 90,000 faculty members, students and alumni online.
University officials acknowledged the blunder to those affected in a letter dated May 7.
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