Advertisement
Promo

Security threats Toolkit

MoJ consults on £500k data breach fines

Tom Espiner ZDNet UK

Published: 12 Nov 2009 16:51 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Companies that suffer serious data breaches could be fined up to £500,000 under government plans announced this week.

On Monday, the Ministry of Justice launched a consultation over levels of monetary penalties for breaches of the Data Protection Act. In a press statement, justice minister Michael Wills said the powers of the body that enforces the act, the Information Commissioner's Office, needed to be strengthened.

'The government is committed to ensuring that personal data is handled and processed responsibly and lawfully," said Wills. "We want to ensure that the Information Commissioner's Office has the powers it needs and is able to impose robust penalties on those who commit serious breaches of data protection principles."

The consultation asks just one question: "Do you consider that a penalty of up to £500,000 provides the ICO with a proportionate sanction for serious contraventions of the data protection principles?"

At present, the ICO has the power to fine organisations up to £5,000 for serious breaches of the Data Protection Act. A Ministry of Justice spokesperson told ZDNet UK on Thursday the £500,000 fine was meant as an effective deterrent.

"The reason we're proposing this new penalty is because it will provide the ICO with a tool to punish serious contraventions of the data protection principles, and serves as an effective deterrent against future contraventions," said the spokesperson. "Following discussions with the ICO, we consider this amount to be a reasonable maximum for all data controllers."

Assistant information commissioner David Smith told ZDNet UK on Thursday it wasn't just the level of the fine that was important, but that the process would be in public — as ensured by a clause recently added to the Data Protection Act.

"We very much welcome the power to impose monetary penalties, not just because of the level of the fine, but also because the process will operate in public," said Smith. "Impact on reputation is always a big lever for organisations."

Smith said the government had considered not imposing any limit on the fine, in line with penalties imposed by the Financial Services Authority, but had decided that £500,000 would be sufficient in light of further powers, which the ICO is in line to be granted.

"The Ministry of Justice is conducting a separate consultation, which is looking at custodial sentences for [malicious data breach] offences," said Smith. "Also, under the Coroner's and Justice Bill [which is going through Parliament], we will have the ability to conduct data protection inspections."

These inspections will not be spot-checks, but performed after notification, said Smith. Inspections will initially start with public sector bodies, but could be extended to the private sector, Smith added.

Data breach figures released by the ICO on Wednesday reveal that the single biggest cause of data loss over the past two years was burglary and theft. However, overall, more incidents were caused by human error in terms of lost hardware, data disclosed in error, or technical or procedural faults.

"By and large, these are all human error problems," said Smith. "But behind the errors are a lack of processes, disciplinary procedures or technical measures, such as encryption."

The public sector organisation with the most data breaches over the past two years was the NHS, according to the ICO figures. The ICO said last year that a spate of data breaches was not due to more incidents, but to more organisations admitting to them.

The Ministry of Justice monetary penalty consultation closes on 21 December.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Did you find this article useful?
6 out of 6 people found this useful


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:







Video icon

Video

Sentry Posts Blog

Cracking Quantum Encryption: A Working...

Cracking Quantum Encryption: A Working Theory Author: Eric Everson, MBA, MSIT-SE It is said to be the future of impenetrable data encryption, but could this new horizon of digital... More

Post a comment

Expert calls for Pan-European cybercri...

Europe needs a unified response to tackle cybercrime, according to computer security expert Ross Anderson. Professor Anderson, who heads security engineering research at the University... More

1 comment

To kill a mobile OS

Way back in the last millennium, when I was previously focused on Mobile phone application development a representative from Nokia came to one of my Tech Ed Chalk and Talk sessions... More

2 comments

Win a BlackBerry with Vlingo voice recognition

Win a BlackBerry with Vlingo voice recognition

What is ZDNet UK's usual tagline?

Competition closes - 14 Jan 2010


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters