Jon Ungoed-Thomas
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A NEW fraud alert was issued by the government this weekend as it confirmed that it had lost another computer disc containing the personal financial details of 40,000 housing benefit claimants.
The unencrypted disc was sent by courier by a West Yorkshire council to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). Officials raised concerns that the disc might be missing on September 18. It has still not been found.
“We have been carefully monitoring all the details of people who might be affected and there is no evidence of fraud,” said a DWP spokesman. “We believe this disc is still somewhere in the system.”
The disc was sent from Kirklees council to the DWP as part of its work monitoring benefits payments. The department has now stopped receiving or sending any electronic data by courier or recorded post.
In a separate incident, it was disclosed this weekend that another disc containing the bank details, salaries, National Insurance numbers and home addresses of more than 6,500 public sector workers has also been lost.
The disc with data on workers, including teachers, in Torbay, Devon, is believed to have gone missing after being sent in the post as part of a government antifraud initiative.
It was one of several discs containing highly sensitive data that were sent to a private data company to check the files of public sector employees for possible fraud. Under the Audit Commission’s national fraud initiative (NFI), information from 1,300 public bodies is sent to a Staffordshire-based company, Synectics Solutions.
“The Audit Commission assists public sector organisations in tracking down suspicious payments by comparing records of those claiming pensions, housing benefits and other entitlements,” said a spokeswoman. “The last NFI exercise detected fraud and overpayments to the value of £111m.”
Torbay council launched an investigation in March 2007 when it realised that a disc had gone missing after being sent for the fraud checks.
The collection of data for the NFI has also raised concerns in other parts of the country. One official who works for a National Health Service trust in southeast England said: “We were told that all our data were being sent, but we didn’t have any choice in the matter. It obviously makes you very concerned when you see how much information the government has lost.”
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Is there some sort of worldwide trend to vote imbeciles into positions of power? Or is it that they just don't care?
Either way we're the nuts because we vote for them
Udo , melbourne, Australia
It is not necessary to steal CDs for the data they contain to be stolen. An enterprising villain will intercept them, secretly copy the data and allow the CDs to continue to their destination without arousing suspicion.
Further: data management systems are maintained by IT staff who have no right to see the data, but can access it nonetheless. Enterprising villains with IT skills will get IT systems support jobs in government, banks and internet service providers with unlimited access to your data.
True data protection is impossible. 2.5M records can't be protected from thousands of staff (let alone enterprising villains) with access to the data. Stealing data isn't like stealing apples: nothing's missing, no fingerprints and rich pickings.
The government's ignorance regarding data is breathtaking. CDs in the post? That's just gross negligence. All systems linked together by ID Card? Oh yes, a great idea - for enterprising villains perhaps. I'll bet they can't wait.
Wayne, London,
And Brown's old Russian control center wants all of our details via id cards huh.
Oh yes what a good idea, more data they will lose.
And keep hearing them say that nanny state control is better for us, as they are better at taking care of us, than we are ourselves.. Yeah right...
Surely the British public can see its about time this control freak government is kicked out...
Graham, Southend, UK
This is only the tip of the iceberg!
Oops, manchester,
Jeff - the main reason these mistakes are being made is because Gordon Brown decided to cut 100,000 (or 20%) of the civil service, while at the same time requiring more and more reporting of data.
Jesse, Hants,
surely we have enough civil servants to carry out checks of this nature - why is such work given to outside companies which must increase the dangers of leaks and potential fraudulent use of individuals financial affairs.
Jeff Harvey, bristol,
Surely Queens Messengers should be to used to carry these types of light sensitive information between Offices.
Howard, Basildon, England
Surely the 'alert' must be AGAINST the Department itself!
sandi, London,
Is it not time that public sector bodies used virtual private networks to send such data instead of relying on the post !!
John, Southampton, England