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14 December 2007
Northern Irish drivers agency loses data on 6000 drivers
Antony Savvas, Computer Weekly
The Driver and Vehicle Agency in Northern Ireland has admitted
to losing the personal details of over 6000 drivers.
Two unencrypted discs sent to the Driver and Vehicle Licensing
Agency (DVLA) in Swansea have gone missing in transit said the Northern
Ireland agency.
The disks were sent last month to help with a safety recall by
a number of car manufacturers. Details of 7700 cars and the personal
details of their 6000-plus owners were sent.
No financial data is said to have been included on the disks. Replacement
data to help with the safety recall was sent a second time on disk
to the DVLA in Swansea, but this time it was delivered personally
by DVA officers going there on other business.
The procedure of sending unencrypted disks in the postal system
was established practice at the DVA, but was identified as a potential
security threat in light of the massive HMRC breach, said the DVA.
This article first appeared on the web-site of Computer Weekly,
at http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2007/12/14/228614/dva-in-northern-ireland-loses-personal-details-of-more-than-6000.htm.
© Reed Business Information 2007.

ICO gets right to spot
check government departments in wake of HMRC privacy catastrophe
(21 November 2007)
UK government loses
data on 25m Britons (20 November 2007)
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