Archive for October, 2008

176 government data breaches in the last year

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Figures released yesterday by the Information Commissioner’s Office show that there have been 176 data breaches in the public sector in the past year.

Data breaches in the private sector were less than half this number: 80 cases were reported.

Earlier this year, Parliament decided that the ICO would be given greater powers to penalise organisations which “recklessly” lose personal data. Information Commissioner Richard Thomas is calling for this to take place as soon as possible.

www.publicservice.co.uk has the story.

Home truths about internal security

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Research by the Liberal Democrats has revealed a 300% increase in the number of lost staff security passes at the Home Office and Ministry of Justice over six years.

The Government departments responsible for the internal security of the nation are so hopeless at their own internal security that they’ve been losing passes at the rate of more than one per day. total of 3,492 staff security passes have been lost or stolen since 2001.  (The departments split in 2007.)

Liberal Democrat Shadow Home Secretary Chris Huhne said:

Everyone understands that things can go missing, but these figures suggest a culture of carelessness among the people responsible for our safety and security.

On average, one of their employees loses their security pass every day.

This Government wants powers to build a database of every phone call and email, but the evidence of lost security passes suggests they could not be trusted to run a nightclub door.

They must scrap ID cards before they are allowed to treat our most sensitive data in the same slapdash manner.”

The Press Association has this report.

Our rights are under threat - outgoing Director of Public Prosecutions

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

Ken Macdonald, the outgoing Director of Public Prosecutions, has launched a wide-ranging attack on the encroachments on our civil liberties. Coming from someone at the coalface of trying to secure prosecutions, Ken Macdonald’s warnings are a particular damning criticism of Labour’s arguments that they are all necessary in order to catch and convict criminals:

He said, the Government should insist that “our rights are priceless” and that: “The best way to face down those threats is to strengthen our institutions rather than to degrade them.”

The intervention will be seen as a significant setback to Home Secretary Jacqui Smith who last week saw her plans to lock up terror suspects for 42 days before being charged thrown out by the House of Lords.

It is also a blow to Miss Smith’s plans for a super-database to record the details of millions of people’s online presence, including emails, SMS messages and Facebook profiles as well as the controversial identity card programme.

Sir Ken chose to issue his tough warning about the perils of the “Big Brother” state in his final speech as DPP, days before he leaves his post at the end of this month.

He warned that MPs should “take very great care to imagine the world we are creating before we build it. We might end up living with something we can’t bear”. (Telegraph)

Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat Shadow Home Secretary, said:

Sir Ken Macdonald has sounded a clarion call for freedom. He is absolutely right to highlight the danger of a Leviathan state that wants to know all and control all about the citizens it should serve and not master. Even very recent history shows that extraordinary state powers are not just used to pursue terrorists. A brief examination of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act shows that it is far more likely to be used to spy on children, pets and bins than it is to catch serious criminals.