, Staff Writer
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DURHAM - Duke University's Fuqua School of Business is notifying 273 former New
York University students that some of their personal information was
inadvertently accessible by targeted Internet searches between July 2007
and April 2008.The NYU students were part of a 1997 class taught by a professor who now
teaches at the Duke business school, according to a Duke press release.
The professor is not identified in the release, and a Duke spokesman declined to identify the professor.The personal data included names and Social Security numbers and was
contained in the faculty member's research records.There has been no indication of any unauthorized access or use of the
personal information, Duke officials said.The information could have been accessed only if searched by specific
student names, along with a search code for Social Security numbers.The personal information was removed from Fuqua's public drives within
30 minutes of the school becoming aware of the problem on April 30.
Within hours, all major search engines had cleared their caches and
indexes of the student information, the press release states.Fuqua began notifying the former NYU students immediately after
receiving addresses from NYU. The release does not say whether all
students whose personal data was compromised could be reached.
eric.ferreri@newsobserver.com or (919) 956-2415
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