Advertisement
Promo

Become a member of the ZDNet UK community

Tom Espiner

View blog's RSS Feed

Security Bullet In

Communiques from the security front, sir

Monday 24 November 2008, 4:26 PM

Gov't loses a PC a week

Posted by Tom Espiner

The government averaged losing one PC per week over the last year, according to figures collated by the Conservatives.

A Friday report by the Press Association said that Tory front-bencher Grant Shapps, who had put together the figures from answers to parliamentary questions, had found that 53 PCs had gone missing from government over the past year. 36 Blackberrys, 30 mobile phones, four disc drives and four memory sticks had also gone missing in the same period.

Shapps said in a statement:

"Until Ministers can demonstrate that their departments can be trusted with confidential information, the Government should place its controversial ID Card scheme on hold. With more than one official computer going missing each week, not to mention numerous hard drives and memory sticks, we're calling on the Government to urgently review data security right across Whitehall."

I rang up the Information Commissioner's Office today to see what their take on it was. The ICO spokesperson I talked to declined to comment on the ID Cards scheme, but said that organisations handling personal data have an obligation to keep it safe.

"Organisations have an obligation to keep personal information secure," the ICO spokepsperson told me. "The ICO produces guidance about how personal information should be processed."



Comments on this post

roger andre

And for all we know, such serious data loss could be partly responsible for the for the economic meltdown we're now going through. After all alot of that data would bound to have been sensetive financial data that could be taken advantage of. Not to mention national security. I wonder who's rubbing their hands together with glee...

Posted by roger andre on Nov 24, 2008 9:47 PM


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters