CORRECTION - Identity Finder Rebrands as Spirion, Hires New CEO and Reveals Results of Enterprise Sensitive Data Audit

LOS ANGELES, CA--(Marketwired - Aug 1, 2016) - In the news release, "Identity Finder Rebrands as Spirion, Hires New CEO and Reveals Results of Enterprise Sensitive Data Audit," issued Thursday, July 28 by Spirion, we are advised by the company that the list of companies in the second bullet in the second set of bullets has changed. Complete corrected text follows.

Identity Finder Rebrands as Spirion, Hires New CEO and Reveals Results of Enterprise Sensitive Data Audit

Spirion Reduces Risk by Eliminating Sensitive Data Sprawl, Shrinking an Organization's Sensitive Data Footprint by 99 Percent

LOS ANGELES, CA -- July 28, 2016 -- Identity Finder LLC (www.IdentityFinder.com), the leading provider of sensitive data risk reduction solutions, today announced it has changed the company name to Spirion, and appointed Dr. Jo Webber as its chief executive officer (CEO). It also announced the results of its enterprise sensitive personal information data audit. Dr. Webber brings more than 16 years of experience leading global technology companies. The new brand and website (www.spirion.com) reflects the company's ongoing mission to leverage its deep knowledge of content, context, data, documents, risk and analytics to deliver a solution that provides cost effective and complete management of the sensitive data risk within the extended organization. Spirion's Data Platform was developed for CISOs, CIOs, and vice presidents of IT and IT Security to prevent the deliberate theft and accidental loss of sensitive data.

Eliminating Risk Starts with Knowing Where All Sensitive Enterprise Data exists
In today's data driven world, data has massive advantages, including consumer convenience and business intelligence. But with that usefulness comes potential risk, including data loss that can quickly lead to compliance violations and fines. According to Ponemon's 2016 Annual Cost of Data Breach report, the per-record cost of a data breach reached $154 this year, up 12 percent from last year's $145 and the average total cost of a single data breach rose 23 percent to $3.79 million. Compounding matters is the fact that sensitive data at many organizations are subject to uncontrolled sprawl, which further increases organizational risk and consists of:

  • Excessive data collection beyond a business' needs

  • Rampant and uncontrolled data duplication

  • Flawed business practices

  • Long and unnecessary data retention

  • Document/file/data sharing within and outside of an organization1

Spirion recently completed long term sensitive data audits at three of its largest enterprise sites, which included a large multinational manufacturer, leading healthcare technology company and a major university. During the audit, the company discovered that if left unchecked, every legitimate piece of sensitive data will create up to 1000 unnecessary copies. What's more, the company found that if left unmanaged, for every legitimate user of sensitive data, up to 100 additional users will have access to it. These assessments are based on before and after audits of the implementation of Spirion's Data Platform.