The head of
HM
Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has resigned after it was revealed in parliament
that the personal details of 25 million Britons had been "lost in the post".
Chancellor of the Exchequer
Alistair
Darling said in a statement that two CDs with the details of 25 million
families had been sent to the
National
Audit Office by courier firm
TNT but failed
to arrive.
The material was apparently put in the post by a junior employee at the HMRC
office in Washington, Tyne & Wear.
The disks, which were password protected but not encrypted, contained names,
addresses, dates of birth, child benefit numbers, National Insurance numbers and
bank or building society account details.
Paul Gray, chairman of HMRC, has already resigned and opposition MPs are
calling on Darling to do likewise.
"The lost bank account numbers, names and addresses represents a gold mine
for thieves and is much more valuable than credit card numbers or taxpayer ID
numbers," said Avivah Litan, vice president at
Gartner
Research.
"Bank account numbers sell for the highest price on the black market, between
$30 and $400, which is significantly more than the 50 cents to $5 that criminals
pay for credit cards.
"If evidence emerges that the data fell into criminal hands, the UK banks may
be forced to close the 15 million accounts and issue new ones at an enormous
cost to them and a major inconvenience for their customers."
This is the third in a series of data breaches at HMRC. The organisation
lost the
details of a number of high net worth individuals in October, and banking
details for 15,000 savers went missing earlier this month when a
laptop
was stolen.
"Another week and another high profile data breach for the government," said
Joseph Hoban, vice president at data protection firm
GuardianEdge.
"This is not the first time that public data has been compromised and, if
lacklustre security continues to rule, it certainly will not be the last.
"It is time that tougher security measures were taken to protect our most
confidential files. Securing two disks with only a password is not sufficient."
Darling has described the incident as "extremely regrettable" but has
resisted calls for his resignation.
The loss has also sparked renewed calls for a data breach law that would
force the government and companies to inform people if their data had been put
at risk.
"California introduced data breach notification legislation some time ago,
which compels businesses to inform customers if their personal data may have
been compromised," said Richard Turner, vice president of sales at security firm
RSA.
"The introduction of similar legislation would not only be a significant step
in combating fraud, but constitutes a basic human entitlement.
"Public awareness of security breaches would serve to focus organisations on
ensuring that confidential information is adequately protected, and enable the
public to take appropriate safeguards in the event of a compromise."
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