|
17 January 2008
Private sector must improve data protection, says Deloitte
Ian Grant, Computer Weekly
The private sector needs to take data privacy more seriously if
it is to stop the Information Commissioner's Office getting the
power to audit their information security systems without warning,
says James Alexander, technology security partner at Deloitte, a
management consulting firm.
"Companies need to take the bull by the horns," Alexander
told Computer Weekly. His comments followed Deloitte's finding that
only 54% of technology, media and telecommunications (TMT) firms
will tell customers if their data privacy is breached.
Alexander said the ICO won "stop and search" powers to
spot-check public sector firms' data protection procedures following
the loss of 25 million personal records by HM Revenue & Customs
(HMRC) last year. "If private sector firms do not want similar
scrutiny, they need to become more proactive," he said.
Alexander said half of TMT firms are spending less than 3% of their
IT budgets on data security, and only 5% are budgeting to increase
their spend by 15% or more. "They are only treading water,"
he said, noting that only 7% of respondents believed they are prepared
for future security threats.
However, three-quarters of firms said "human error" by
insiders was the greatest danger, ahead of operations and technology.
"The HMRC incident showed that information security can no
longer be considered a back-office function," Alexander said.
Companies now underestimate the impact of data breaches, but the
ICO's new powers, if applied to the private sector, could force
a radical revision of the risks they face, he said.
This article first appeared on the web-site of Computer Weekly,
at http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/01/17/228958/private-sector-must-do-more-to-protect-customer-data-analyst.htm.
© Reed Business Information 2008.

Banks to increase security spending
(20 September 2007)
Six top computer
forensics experts testify to their craft (comment, October 2006)
News index
|