Losses of sensitive personal information by public sector bodies will persist
unless the government introduces stronger controls security experts have argued.
Recent Freedom of Information requests have highlighted the frequency with
which data is being lost: 13 London councils admitted to having lost or wrongly
revealed public data in the last year.
The unrelenting loss of sensitive data is likely to weaken trust in public
bodies, argued Gary Clark, vice president of security solution supplier for
businesses and governments, SafeNet. “Taking serious, legislative steps is the
only way to rebuild it,” he said.
At Kensington and Chelsea council there have been two instances of social
workers loosing files in bars in the past year. The files contained court
reports, statements of special educational needs and names of young people in
care.
The fundamentals of good data policy are not difficult, argued Dennis
Hoffman, vice president of data security at RSA: organisations need to know what
data they have, where it is kept and who has access rights. A good first step is
the introduction of data classification technology, which can help business
leaders identify sensitive information. "That helps make IT smarter," he said.
Devin Redmond, senior director of product management at Websense said that IT
professionals should focus on auditing their data and introducing policies to
restrict what information can leave the organisation. "There is frequently a gap
in the understanding of what sensitive data is and where sensitive resides. You
then need to look at how it is used and what policies are in place governing
that."
The Local Government Association (LGA) is apparently working on new data
protection guidelines for councils, but details remain vague. “I think there is
some kind of guidelines being pulled together,” said an LGA spokesman, who also
said individual councils should form their own set of concrete guidelines. “It
is not our job to tell councils what to do,” he added.
In addition, the LGA spokesman disagreed that councils had a relaxed attitude
in their treatment of people’s data. “There are no systematic problems,” he
said. “What we can’t legislate for are people who don’t follow the rules,” he
added.
The LGA said London council staff are involved in regular data management
meetings to discuss security issues, once every five to six weeks.
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