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Loss of armed forces data is 'regrettable'



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Published Date: 11 October 2008
MPs demanded a "cultural change" in public sector data handling yesterday as it em-erged that a computer hard drive with details of Armed Forces personnel was missing.
In the latest Whitehall data loss embarrassment, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) revealed that names, addresses, passport numbers, dates of birth and driving licence details of about 100,000 employees had been lost.

It also contained the next-of-kin
details of the Army, Royal Navy and RAF personnel, as well as data on 600,000 potential services applicants and the names of their referees.

Officials are "not ruling out" the risk that bank account details of personnel were held on the drive, which belonged to its IT contractor EDS.

The department said it learned of the loss on Wednesday and MoD police were investigating. Downing Street described the loss of the data as "regrettable".

It is only the latest information security breach to hit the MoD. In July it admitted 658 of its laptops had been stolen over the past four years and 26 portable memory sticks containing classified information had been either stolen or misplaced since January.

Tory MP Nigel Evans, who chairs the All Party Parliamentary Group on Identity Fraud, said: "It is vital there is a cultur-al change across the public sector with all professionals aware of their responsibility to protect personal data."

The Liberal Democrats described the loss as a "disturbing breach of security" and called for an urgent inquiry into how it had occurred.



The full article contains 256 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 October 2008 10:01 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: British armed forces
 
1

subrosa,

11/10/2008 01:05:46
Regrettable? Is that what they think? It's utterly shameful and a disgrace. Any government employee deserves their private information to be protected and in particular HM Forces.

This leaves our forces wide open to all types of abuse and their families.

Furthermore I shall never have an ID card. Our elected government is not fit to respect my personal information.

I notice this is on headlines today when I understand the loss was revealed some weeks ago. Speak about burying bad news ...
2

Guga II,

Rockall 11/10/2008 02:37:05
Yet another of the many examples of government held data being mislaid or stolen.

This is the same mob that want to compile a massive database of the complete details of everyone in the country for their Stalinist, totalitarian, control freak ID database.

I wouldn't trust any government, but especially the New Labour Sleaze and Corruption Party with all my information, and there is no way that I will participate in their ID scheme, or ever have or carry an ID card.

I wouldn't trust this mob to be put in charge of the lolly jar at a kindrgarten.
3

Pilrig,

Livingston 11/10/2008 13:54:55
Don't worry, all will be fixed come the id cards.

And I'll be Livingston from location Pilrig !
4

fife runner,

11/10/2008 19:04:28
another case of a private company being trusted with data. remember DHL and the familt credit data lost or TNT with tax data lost. EDS contracted by the MOD is a private company.
5

James Donald,

Newbridge 11/10/2008 20:31:35
#4 fife runner - EDS is also contracted by the DWP and the Ministry of Justice (it was also formerly contracted by the Inland Revenue). A huge amount of very sensitive (Public Sector)data to be entrusted to a private company in business for profit. Yet more and more public sector work is due to be contracted out to the private sector. The latest rumour (actually it is bit more than rumour) is that HM Revenue and Customs call centres and Tax Return processing.
6

Kipling,

12/10/2008 18:07:54
Like I've written before, look at the kind of employees working in these companies. Nor should those in the IT departments be trusted. My view is that there is in fact a network getting hold of this data and using sloppy or bent employees to seize the opportunity when it arises. BUT rather than create a climate of distrust just simple physical lockdown mechanisms should be in place. Cost the data by giving it a 'personal threat value' so that the value determines the security cost. The cultural attitude problem arises from failure to recognise how loss can result in identity or financial fraud and as there's so much personal data flying around in banks, human resource, government departments, employees don't or won't recognise the link between sloppy filing, lack of local shredders, easy hackable passwords, firedoors/back entrances near portable computer hard drives, allowing non-authorised access to the machines by irrelevant employees, unlocked store-room cupboards, etc. with identity theft, malicious communications, and fraud. I've seen it all and suffered as a consequence. Don't think this just to do with losses of large amounts of data. It happens on a daily basis as a consequence of the political climate we live in and the kind of people who are a part of government bureaucracy and its agencies. Don't like one claimant/person? Take him/her out (but not with a gun, with electronic data misuse).

Remember Guga II, that data information also tends nowadays to include ethnic group, so it's your future 'fascists' who might put under such observation such categorisations -- for example, all Scots out of the white british, or any other ethnic group not obvious by name alone -- who will also have a field (datafield?) day. The Stalinists I imagine will have a go at certain income classes.

 

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