By Tom Espiner, 18 June 2008 09:01
NEWS
Secretary for local government Hazel Blears has had a computer stolen from her constituency offices in Salford.
The PC, which was lost on Saturday, contained details of the Cabinet minister's constituency work, and some "restricted information", according to a spokesperson for the department for communities and local government. The spokesperson told silicon.com sister site ZDNet.co.uk that there was no sensitive information on the computer.
Security from A to Z
Click on the links below to find out more...
A is for Antivirus
B is for Botnets
C is for CMA
D is for DDoS
E is for Extradition
F is for Federated identity
G is for Google
H is for Hackers
I is for IM
J is for Jaschan (Sven)
K is for Kids
L is for Love Bug
M is for Microsoft
N is for Neologisms
O is for Orange
P is for Passwords
Q is for Questions
R is for Rootkits
S is for Spyware
T is for Two-factor authentication
U is for USB sticks/devices
V is for Virus variants
W is for Wi-fi
X is for OS X
Y is for You
Z is for Zero-day
The spokesperson said: "The PC was primarily used for Hazel's constituency business and contained some details of her constituency work. The PC did contain a 'confidential' presentation on the housing market from March but the market has now moved on. There was some restricted information on the PC but no secret or top-secret information. The PC also contained some material from the department. None of the departmental material included sensitive personal data about the public or would be of use to criminals."
The spokesperson declined to say whether the computer had been password-protected or encrypted. The spokesperson said: "The contents of the PC are protected." There will, however, be a review of security procedure in the light of the theft.
The spokesperson added: "This case has highlighted that our departmental guidance and procedures on lower-level material are not as clear as they should be. We are therefore revising our guidance and procedures accordingly. It is important to remember that this incident relates to the criminal theft of a security-protected PC from a locked and alarmed office. The theft is now subject to a routine police investigation."
The incident is the latest in a long line of government data breaches, including the loss of 25 million details of child-benefit claimants by HMRC last year.


Comments
There is 1 comment. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
strange to think but it is actually a plus that this laptop was stolen rather than just casually left somewhere like the majority of government security breaches.
oh my god spin is catching!
I'll be saying it's a good thing it was stolen from a secure government office because it stopped the thief from doing anything more harmful next