Data loss stole all the headlines in 2007 following a number of high profile
breaches.
Forget the impetuous thief who was brave enough to
nick ex-SAS
soldier Andy McNab's laptop from his car. Other companies were queuing up to
give sensitive data away.
It was almost a competition to see who could lose the most customer details,
despite the industry getting a huge wakeup call early in 2007.
That warning came courtesy of the
Nationwide
Building Society, which found itself
slapped with
£1m fine from the
Financial
Services Authority following the theft of a laptop containing details of
nearly 11 million customers.
Halifax
then apologised in March after
13,000
mortgage details went missing along with a stolen briefcase.
Retailer TK
Maxx then decided to land the award for biggest data disaster of the year by
announcing that
45 million
customer credit card details had been nabbed.
The concerted attack took place over an 18-month period on an open wireless
link that handled payments.
A group of banks and credit card companies later claimed that
94 million
TK Maxx consumers were actually affected.
Next up,
Fidelity
National Information Services admitted in May that personal information on a
mere 2.3 million people has been
illegally
removed from its database.
And while TK Maxx may have won hands down when it came to the most customer
data ever lost, the UK's
HM
Revenue and Customs went for the UK record.
Parliament revealed that the
personal
details of 25 million Britons sent by standard delivery on un-encrypted
discs had been "lost in the post".
Information Commissioner Richard Thomas then warned that several other public
bodies had
secretly
admitted to losing data following the HMRC crisis.
The avalanche of cases would have been less worrying for consumers if an
obvious online trade in people's personal information wasn't taking place.
An investigation by a UK newspaper found more than 100 websites
selling account
information for UK bank customers, including account details, Pins and
security codes.
The amount of consumer crime was overshadowed only by the digital cold war
being waged online.
Countries were queuing up in 2007 to accuse the Chinese government of using
the internet to conduct a spying campaign.
US officials claimed that the Chinese military
successfully hacked
computers inside the Pentagon in June.
The
Commons
Foreign Affairs Committee then accused the UK government of
covering up the scale
of a breach to its systems.
France then spoke out following an
attack on French
government systems.
MI5 was so worried about the
threat that it sent a letter to 300 UK chief executives and security experts
warning of an
increased risk from
Chinese hackers.
At the end of 2007 web security firm
Finjan
claimed to have traced a
wave of Trojans
infecting PCs around the world to sources in China, including one site belonging
to a Chinese government office.
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