Defence Secretary Des Browne has launched an official inquiry into military
security after the
loss
of a Royal Navy laptop containing the personal details of 600,000
people.
Browne also revealed that two other laptops had been stolen, one in
Manchester in October 2006 and one in Edinburgh in December 2000, neither of
which were brought to light until now.
The
Conservative
Party lambasted Browne over the loss during a parliamentary meeting, producing
statistics claiming that more than 600
Ministry
of Defence laptops and PCs had been stolen since 1998.
Shadow Defence Secretary Dr Liam Fox said: "In many ways this is worse than
the
loss
of the child benefit records because we know this fell into
criminal hands."
Data security firms have also slammed the government over yet another loss of
data, pointing out that the information could have been protected in a number of
ways.
Joe Fantuzzi, chief executive at security firm
Workshare,
believes that UK citizens should be given a timeline for tackling data breaches,
which continue to put people's identity and privacy at risk.
"The latest data breach which has resulted in the loss of MoD data affecting
600,000 people is shocking," said Fantuzzi.
"After the HMRC scandal we would have thought that the government would put
safeguards on information such as passport details, National Insurance data and
NHS numbers with more care."
Fantuzzi added that the government continues to come under fire for info
rmation loss, but appears reluctant to introduce data breach regulation which
would result in more punitive measures for such serious losses of data.
Jamie Cowper, director of marketing in EMEA at
PGP
Corporation, warned that policies, procedures and training will
take time and money to implement, and that laptops will continue to be lost.
"Organisations must make it an absolute priority to start proactively
defending electronic information now," he said.
Alan Bentley, EMEA vice president of
Lumension
Security, agreed that educating employees over the risks of data
theft needs to be tackled.
"At the heart of all the recent data losses is a lack of awareness and
coherence in security policies," he said.
"The 'human factor' is often the weakest link in any security armour and the
MoD is no exception to this rule. The laptop stolen on 9 January failed to meet
the specific requirements of its security policy, i.e. to encrypt data carried
on laptops."
Bentley warned that organisations holding sensitive data should lock down
their databases so that employees cannot download data onto mobile devices and
take them off the premises.
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