Human error has put hundreds of personal details kept by the Ministry of
Defence at risk, according to a report out today.
The personal details of more than 200 soldiers were lost in the incident, as
well as the names of their wives and children, after an army officer left his
laptop in a pub, according to a report in the Sun newspaper.
In response to the lost laptop, a MoD spokesman told IT Week, “We take all
security breaches extremely seriously and the
MoD and Army will be
investigating this incident as a matter of urgency.”
The allegedly unprotected information was reported to contain data on
soldiers' movements, military exercises and weapons store locations, as well as
recommendations for promotions.
Commenting on the incident, Philip Wicks of consultancy firm
Morse said, “Sir Gus O’Donnell recently
issued strict guidelines banning all laptops with unprotected information
leaving government offices. These were good guidelines, but human error means
they won’t always be followed.”
Although the laptop was handed into the Sun by an anonymous individual, and
will soon be returned to the MoD, Wicks highlighted the risk to reputation the
numerous data losses are causing the government.
“This isn’t rocket science. Any organisation that has sensitive information
on laptops should be pulling them in and getting the data encrypted,” he said.
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