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HCA International fined 200k for Data loss #ITSecurity #DataSecurity #unencrypted

HCA International Ltd, private health firm are the latest to be fined by the ICO.  They have been fined £200,000 for failing to keep data secure after it was found that conversations had by IVF patients were online. Audio recordings of interviews with patients were being sent to a company unencrypted in India for transcription. The Indian company was unable to maintain secure access due to an unsecure server. By failing to ensure its subcontractor had acted responsibly, HCA International failed to comply with the seventh data protection principle. More details on the monetary penalty notice click here Supplier Risk is a huge concern for most companies - You may have all the bells and whistles when it comes to security your infrastructure but your partners may not. Failing to ensure due diligence in the Supply chain costs - with HCA it was £200,000 - next year it would of been much more!! #EUGDPR

Time to get serious in 2015

Security professionals are faced with the on-going problem of stakeholders under-estimating the security flaws within their organisation. In most cases this is not the failing of the security team but depending on the market/vertical, teams are faced with budget constraints, redundancies, or most commonly, companies not taking responsibility that Security starts within. This means educating internal staff to take responsibility from the moment they walk into the office; I.e. The devices they bring, the doors that they open to 'guests',  the confidential conversations they have in open areas and the general ethos. Furthermore, there is the responsibility of your key suppliers and other third parties that you share information with.  You may have all the IT/Cyber security gadgets and resources you need but what are your suppliers doing with that data? Do they share the same vision for security and are they as vigilant as you? How do you measure that in an effici...

ICO Referendum response plus UK Gov recommendations to #DataBreaches and University gets suffers Second #DataBreach

ICO Referendum result response An ICO spokesperson said: “The Data Protection Act remains the law of the land irrespective of the referendum result. “If the UK is not part of the EU, then upcoming EU reforms to data protection law would not directly apply to the UK. But if the UK wants to trade with the Single Market on equal terms we would have to prove 'adequacy' - in other words UK data protection standards would have to be equivalent to the EU's General Data Protection Regulation framework starting in 2018. “With so many businesses and services operating across borders, international consistency around data protection laws and rights is crucial both to businesses and organisations and to consumers and citizens. The ICO’s role has always involved working closely with regulators in other countries, and that would continue to be the case. “Having clear laws with safeguards in place is more important than ever given the growing digital economy, and we will be s...