MPs call to criminalise data loss

Justice Select Committee demands heavy fines and/or jail terms

Written by Iain Thomson

MPs on the Justice Select Committee have called for new laws to protect the integrity of personal data.

The move was prompted by critical government data losses over the past few months, such as the loss of computer disks at HM Revenue & Customs.

The committee called for a breach law that would make it a legal obligation for companies to notify customers if their data has been accessed and to create a system of fines for repeat offenders.

"The scale of the data loss by government bodies and contractors is truly shocking, but the evidence we have had points to further hidden problems," said committee chairman Alan Beith.

"It is frankly incredible, for example, that the measures put in place at HM Revenue & Customs were not already standard procedure."

The Committee also called for the Information Commissioner to have powers to make spot checks on government departments to ensure that correct practice is being followed.

"These latest proposals to punish reckless data leakage with large fines and/or prison sentences will go some way in encouraging organisations from the top down to be compliant or at least be able to prove they took the necessary steps to protect their data," said Alan Bentley, vice president of Lumension Security.

"The UK is not without laws surrounding this issue as we already have the Computer Misuse Act 1990 and the Data Protection Act. The question is how far this new law is taken.

"There is a very fine line that needs to be balanced which ensures that all our personal data is secure but does not hamper the efficiency of a business."

However, some are questioning the government's approach. "The government is moving closer to implementing US-style data breach notification laws, but making data loss a criminal offence may be a step too far," said Jamie Cowper, marketing director at PGP Europe.

"Before we go for the nuclear option, perhaps we should look at how current security regimes can be tightened up with stricter enterprise data policies, for instance.

"We should also test the power of simply naming and shaming organisations as a deterrent to lax attitudes to data protection, as it has certainly worked in the US."

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print this
  • Share

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Bank details for sale on the web

As little as £1 buys you an active bank account 03 Dec 2007

 

UK government guilty of DPA breach

Website farce exposes details of 50,000 applicants 15 Nov 2007

US experts call for tougher data laws

CSIA steps up lobbying 04 Oct 2007

FSA slaps Nationwide with £980,000 fine

Stolen laptop contained 11 million client records 15 Feb 2007

Cost of hack attacks soars

Average cost now $182 per compromised record 23 Oct 2006

ICO investigating mobile firm over data leaks

Information Commissioner reveals details of widespread abuse by staff 17 Nov 2009

Self-assessment tax fraudster gets suspended sentence

Michael Roger Frosh given suspended prison sentence and ordered to undertake 80 hours unpaid work after submitting false self-assessment tax returns 22 Jan 2010

Police arrest London teenagers in cyber crime swoop

Police Central e-crime Unit accuses youths of helping to run criminal online forum 24 Jun 2010

related white papers

today's top stories

Financial IT job market recovery continues

Recruitment growth suggests IT budgets are increasing 30 Jul 2010

Satellite broadband touted as digital divide clincher

KA-SAT launch promises 10Mbit/s service for hard-to-reach locations 29 Jul 2010

Ofcom slams ISPs for exaggerated broadband speed claims

New code of practice for ISPs planned by the regulator 27 Jul 2010

Aerohive offers traffic light Wi-Fi monitoring

Firm promises simple 'red, yellow or green' system with Client Health Score tool 27 Jul 2010

Flaw in top wireless security protocol WPA2 uncovered

Disgruntled insiders could hack corporate wireless LAN 26 Jul 2010

Advertisement

How to achieve business and financial-system implementation success
A look at how organisations - regardless of size - can work towards successful business software installations and factors that determine the outcome.

Case study: Specsavers put customer care into focus
How Specsavers captured customer feedback at point of sale and incorporated the results into its CRM system.

Advertisement

Citrix

Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; IThound.com brings you thousands of white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

Latest poll

ICO to lean more heavily on public sector bodies

ICO to lean more heavily on public sector bodies

The ICO has said it will lean more heavily on public sector bodies to secure timely FOI responses, do you think this is:

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

picture of Jason HartVideo

Ethical hacker reveals the security secrets behind cloud computing

Jason Hart, Senior VP at Cryptocard, shows Computing just how easy it is to illegally gain access to corporate cloud services to wreak havoc and steal money. 29 Jun 2010

gartner logoVideo

Part 1: 2010 trends in SOA and Application Development and Integration

Gartner analyst Paolo Malinverno explores trends in SOA 29 Jun 2010

Latest in-depth articles

Map of 3G coverageComment

The risks of selling off the 800MHz radio spectrum at the wrong price

It's a choice between revenue now or universal broadband later 30 Jul 2010

Luton Borough Council officesAnalysis

Local authority leads the way in digital backup technology

Luton Borough Council tells of the benefits of early adopter of VTL, data deduplication and virtualisation 27 Jul 2010

Primary Navigation