In the past, most laptops and mobile phones were stolen with the aim of
selling them on. The idea that time spent trawling through the data residing on
the device might be well worth their while would have struck most thieves as
very odd. Today, however, many criminals are well aware that the right kind of
data has the potential to make them much better off than the snazziest of
handsets or mobile PCs.
The burgeoning black market in stolen data has had more than a little help –
albeit unwitting – from the public sector. Since the loss of the two Revenue
& Customs discs last November, government data losses have remained in the
public eye. The latest figures reveal that more than 200 government laptops have
been lost or stolen since 2001.
The numerous losses show that even where security policies exist, they are
still not obvious to employees and are not being applied by organisations.
Public sector workers need to be re-educated about the risks of data loss, and
departments should ensure the penalty for not following policy is severe.
Until these measures are put in place across the public sector, data-sharing
projects such as ID cards and shared services will continue to raise a red flag
over privacy.
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