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November 22, 2007
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Thursday
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Ziqa’ad 11, 1428
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Britons’ data is safe, says Brown
LONDON, Nov 21: Prime Minister Gordon Brown tried to reassure Britons their personal details were safe on Wednesday after the one of the biggest security breaches in the country’s history – the loss of two computer disks containing details about almost half the population.
Experts said the loss left millions of people exposed to identity theft and bank fraud.
“I profoundly regret and apologise for the inconvenience and worries that have been caused to millions of families that receive child benefits,” Brown told the House of Commons. “We have a duty to do everything that we can to protect the public.”
Brown said he had asked security experts to work with government departments to check their procedures. He said the information commissioner would also be given the power to carry out spot checks on government departments.
Brown said he stood by Treasury chief Alistair Darling, who revealed the lapse at Britain’s tax and customs service.
There were gasps from lawmakers when Darling described the scale of the loss on Tuesday.
Two computer disks that went missing in the internal post while being sent from one government department to another contained names addresses, dates of birth, national insurance numbers and in some cases banking details for 25 million adults and children, almost half the country’s population of 60 million.
Darling said the disks contained details of the 7.25 million families in Britain claiming child benefit – a tax-free monthly payment available to everyone with children. He said the delivery was not being tracked and was missing for three weeks before any alarm was raised.
He insisted there was no evidence the data had fallen into the hand of criminals, and said police were involved in a hunt for the missing disks. He said banks had been told to look for signs of suspicious activity, he said. The disks were password protected but the information on them was not encrypted, officials said.
“The police tell me there is no evidence there has been any criminal or unusual activity,” Darling said.
Darling, already rocked by fallout from the run on troubled mortgage lender Northern Rock, said he was not going to resign.
“I am not going to start running away from things when things get difficult,” he told British Broadcasting Corp. radio. “It is difficult, it is unwelcome in every respect, and I am determined to see it through.”
Information Commissioner Richard Thomas, the official charged with overseeing data protection, said the lapse was “a shocking case.”—AP
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