A stolen US space agency laptop containing codes that control the International Space Station (ISS) did not put the orbiting lab in peril, a Nasa spokesman said on Friday.
The unencrypted notebook computer went missing in March 2011 and "resulted in the loss of the algorithms used to command and control the International Space Station", Nasa Inspector General Paul Martin told politicians this week.
But the US space agency insisted that international astronauts were never at risk aboard the research outpost.
"Nasa takes the issue of IT security very seriously, and at no point in time have operations of the International Space Station been in jeopardy due to a data breach," spokesman Trent Perrotto said.
The theft was alerted to Congress on Wednesday along with 5408 computer security "incidents" that resulted in unauthorised access to Nasa systems or installation of malicious software in the past two years, Martin said.