Friday, July 13, 2007

U.K. commissioner blames CEOs for data breaches














The United Kingdom's information commissioner is calling on chief
executives to take the security of customer and staff information more
seriously.

"The roll call of banks, retailers, government
departments, public bodies and other organizations which have admitted
serious security lapses is frankly horrifying," Richard Thomas
wrote in a report. "How can laptops holding details of customer
accounts be used away from the office without strong encryption? How
can millions of store card transactions fall into the wrong hands?"

The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) received almost
24,000 inquiries and complaints concerning personal information, and it
prosecuted 16 individuals and organizations in the past 12 months,
according to its annual report for 2006 and 2007.








"My message to those at the top of organizations is to respect the
privacy of individuals and the integrity of the information held about
them, to embrace data protection positively, and to be sure you are not
the business or political leader who failed to take information rights
seriously," Thomas said.


The ICO received complaints under both the Data Protection Act and the Freedom of Information Act.


More than half of Data Protection Act cases required the ICO to simply
provide advice and guidance, while a breach was likely to have happened
in more than a third of cases, of which a further 77 percent resulted
in remedial actions such as correcting an individual's record or
training staff.








The ICO received almost 6,000 complaints under the Freedom of Information Act and has closed more than three-fourths of those.


Public awareness of data protection rights has increased to 82 percent,
with more people understanding that personal information must be
handled appropriately, according to the report.

The information commissioner's plea follows a number of
security breaches over the last year, including 12 U.K. banks found to
be in breach of the Data Protection Act, following complaints about the
disposal of customer information.

U.K. bank Barclays is facing an ICO investigation over
allegations of customer privacy breaches, and telecommunications
provider Orange and retailer Littlewoods were also found to be in
breach of the Data Protection Act by the ICO this year.


Gemma Simpson of Silicon.com reported from London.





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Distributed by Hasan Shrek, independence blogger. Also run online business ,internet marketing solution , online store script .
Beside he is  writing some others blogs for notebook computer , computer training , computer software and personal computer

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