Around 90 per cent of respondents to a survey of UK councils, London boroughs
and police authorities do not have special procedures in place for protecting
sensitive data, new research claims.
The findings come from
BeCrypt's
recent Public Sector Data Security Survey which investigated how public sector
organisations approach requirements for mobile working and the resulting issues
for data security.
Furthermore, only eight per cent of those local authorities interviewed have
full disaster recovery plans.
The survey, conducted during August and September 2007, asked about disaster
recovery plans in the event that employees may not able to get to work, how
important mobile working is to the organisation, and data security for mobile
devices.
It also included questions on the repercussions of data leakage and the use
of USB devices.
Richard Brooks, director of sales in EMEA at BeCrypt, said: "The survey
provided an extremely useful piece of quantifiable research to assess how public
sector organisations approach the requirements and challenges for mobile
working.
"The use of laptops and removable media pose an increasing risk to data
security, but the survey found that 30 per cent of councils have no policy
regarding the use of USB devices and the inadvertent or malicious threat of data
leakage.
"It is evident that such organisations not only require a security policy,
but encryption solutions that enable it to be implemented."
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