http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/240e2eb2-2d0c-11e4-8105-00144feabdc0.html
By Chris Nuttall
FT.com
August 26, 2014
The UK’s Prison Service can lock its cells but not its hard drives, it
seems – displaying a lack of technical knowhow that “beggars belief”,
according to the Information Commissioner’s Office.
The information rights regulator has fined the Ministry of Justice
£180,000 for a second incident where an unencrypted hard drive went
missing – in May 2013 – with sensitive and confidential information about
prisoners.
After a similar case in October 2011, when an unencrypted hard drive
containing the details of 16,000 prisoners was lost, the Prison Service
issued new hard drives, which were able to encrypt – or scramble –
information on them, to all 75 prisons in England and Wales.
However, the ICO’s investigation into the latest incident has found that
the Prison Service didn’t realise that the encryption option on the new
hard drives needed to be turned on to work correctly.
[...]
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