Chief executives of firms that expose customers' confidential data should be
put under arrest and jailed, according to a survey conducted by web security
firm Websense.
The survey of over one hundred global security professionals was conducted at
the annual e-Crime Congress in London.
Over a quarter of respondents said that a jail sentence is the appropriate
punishment for a serious data breach, while only three per cent said they did
not believe any legally enforced punishment was necessary.
In the 2007 survey, only 74 per cent of the security professionals believed
the Board should be responsible for data breaches, but this year the figure
increased to 95 per cent. However, less respondents blame IT - only 5 per cent
said the IT department should be responsible for breaches, in comparison to last
year’s 21 per cent.
This change of opinion could stem from the large number of data breaches that
have occurred since last November’s HM revenue and customs loss of 25 million
data records which were stored on two discs.
Carrie Hartnell, transformational business programme manager at trade body
Intellect, agreed that losses are the
outcome of human error rather than because of a failure in technology.
Hartnell argued for a shift in societal and cultural attitudes in how people
treat personal data.
“Intellect believes that organisations and government departments should have
a co-ordinated approach to data security that recognises the need to educate and
train its staff around the handling and use of personal data as well as the
appropriate technical security measures,” she added. “They need to ensure that
their employees know when they are accessing confidential data and that they
understand the policies and procedures for protecting it."
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