From the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of New Zealand: We think it is time to ‘name names’ where it is warranted. Our view is that in certain circumstances, the Privacy Act is better served by revealing the organisations that have breached the law. Up to now, we’ve rarely publicly named organisations. It was done…
Category: Non-U.S.
UK: Repeated security failings lead to £180,000 fine for Ministry of Justice
Long-time readers of DataBreaches.net will recall that I’ve posted breaches involving the UK Ministry of Justice before (cf this post or this post about a monetary penalty involving an email breach at HMP Cardiff). Now there’s another monetary penalty, it seems: The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has served a £180,000 penalty on the Ministry of Justice over…
UK: Local authorities audit report: “areas of good practice, but clear room for improvement by all”
A report published by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) today has highlighted ‘clear room for improvement’ in how local authorities comply with the Data Protection Act. The ICO audited 16 local authorities last year. The audits include an overall ‘assurance rating’, but none received high assurance that they were complying with data protection law. Six…
SG: Alleged ‘Messiah’ hacker faces 105 more charges
Olivia Siong reports: Alleged “Messiah” hacker James Raj Arokiasamy was handed an additional 105 charges in court on Monday (Aug 25). This includes charges for securing unauthorised access into the Fuji Xerox webserver between Mar 1 and 24 last year. He is also accused of hacking into and making unauthorised modifications to a fan site…
UK: Customer data loss soars at financial firms
Tessa Norman reports: The number of customer data loss incidents reported to the FCA [Financial Conduct Authority] has increased significantly in the past year. A Freedom of Information request published by the FCA shows that in 2013, the regulator was notified of 13 incidents where firms have lost customer data or had it stolen. Some…
KR: KT ordered to pay 100,000 won each to data-leak victims
Yonhap News reports: South Korea’s No. 2 mobile carrier KT Corp. was ordered by a local district court Friday to pay 100,000 won (US$97) in compensation to each customer who had personal data leaked in 2012. The Seoul Central District Court’s ruling came after some 28,000 KT users filed a lawsuit against the mobile carrier for…