A Look at the Most Common Data Theft Case: The Inside Job
Despite intriguing portraits of the Hollywood-style hacker, employees are most likely to steal proprietary information
Of all the corporate cases a computer forensics consultant might be called upon to investigate, data theft, or theft of proprietary information, is the most common, says Richard Morochove of Morochove and Associates, a computer forensics firm in Toronto.“One thing that has been fairly common is suspicion that an employee or former employee has gotten access to proprietary company data and has either sent it to a competitor or is using it to compete with the company,” says Morochove. “So this would be data such as customer lists or proprietary price lists, that sort of thing.” Inside Jobs Most Common“If you look at Hollywood and what’s on TV there’s a great emphasis on someone who hacks into a company system and extracts the information,” says Morochove. "In real life, it’s most common that an employee or former employee is the one who steals the information, because the employee is someone who generally has access to the information and also knows what information is very valuable to the company. It’s generally an inside job rather than an outside hacker.”
To learn what measures to put in place before a data theft occurs, read our useful article on How to Prevent Data Theft
When there is suspicion that a data breach has occurred and that it has likely originated from within the company, a computer forensic expert may be called upon to examine electronic files and recover any lost information. Morochove could be called in by the manager of human resources, the head of IT, a chief information officer, a chief financial officer, a company president or a firm’s in-house counsel.
Suspicious Behavior Raises Flags
Morochove narrows down his search by meeting with the client to discuss their suspicions and then comes up with a focused plan for the data search.




