Lim Min Zhang reports: A firm has been fined $4,000 by Singapore’s privacy watchdog for the leak of the personal data of more than 400 national servicemen on June 12 last year due to a technical error. The data comprised the log-in identifications, e-mail addresses, delivery addresses and mobile phone numbers of 427 men from…
Category: Non-U.S.
DPP employee who had ‘a nosey’ in murder file gets 11 month sentence
Tom Tuite reports: A civil servant in the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has been been given an 11-month sentence for disclosing sensitive information about the arrest of a suspect in a dissident republican murder case. Service officer Jonathan Lennon (35) from Clonee, Dublin 15, who admitted having a “nosey” in the…
UK: Recent enforcement actions by the ICO deal with employees behaving badly
From the Information Commissioner’s Office in the UK, news about two cases involving employees behaving badly. One case involved a housing association employee snooping in records without justification, and the other involved a Restorative Justice Caseworker who sent personal data on victims and offenders to her home email address. A former customer services officer at…
Cathay Data Breach Incident – Personal Data Security & Retention Principles Contravened – Lax Data Governance
The following is the media statement from the Privacy Commissioner’s Office following the conclusion of their investigation into the 2018 Cathay Pacific Airways breach. You can download their investigative report from their site here (pdf). The Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data, Hong Kong (Privacy Commissioner) Mr Stephen Kai-yi WONG today published an investigation report on…
U.S. finds American guilty in Singapore HIV data leak case
Reuters reports: A U.S. citizen who leaked the names of more than 14,000 HIV-positive people in Singapore has been found guilty by a U.S. court of illegally transferring personal data and threatening the Singapore government, court filings show. Read more on Reuters.
The EU’s Embassy In Russia Was Hacked But The EU Kept It A Secret
Alberto Nardelli reports: The European Union’s embassy in Moscow was hacked and had information stolen from its network, according to a leaked internal document seen by BuzzFeed News. An ongoing “sophisticated cyber espionage event” was discovered in April, just weeks before the European Parliament elections — but the European External Action Service (EEAS), the EU’s…