Card Systems is frequently cited as an example of how costly a breach can be to a business, but in Australia, Bottle Domains may become a similar example. Following a breach that resulted in the theft of personal information on approximately 60,000 people that was put up for sale on the internet, the company has…
UK: NHS trusts not allowed to seek alternative patient record systems
The government has brushed aside calls for acute hospital trusts to be allowed to implement alternative electronic patient record systems if the £12.7bn NHS National Programme for IT (NPfIT) does not make sufficient progress with its own software. Read more on computing.co.uk
UK: DNA pioneer: Innocents should be removed from database
Rebecca Thomson reports: A leading DNA scientist whose work led to the creation of the DNA database has called for innocent people to be removed from it. Alec Jeffreys, the inventor of genetic fingerprinting, says forcing innocent people to remain on the database will erode public support for the project. Currently anyone who is arrested…
Australian Government Set To Strip Privacy Protection From Patient Records
Government is taking a bold step in legislating to gain access to the private health records of all Australians. An exposure draft of legislation quietly released on the Thursday night before Easter will give government the right to access all information recorded by doctors on individual patients records. Read more on Medindia.com
Five Romanians arrested for hacking into U.S. pharmaceutical companies
Dan Kaplan of SC Magazine reports that five people have been arrested for illegally accessing computer systems belonging to unnamed U.S. pharmaceutical companies. The hackers allegedly installed keylogger software to steal card data on point-of-sales systems. Lucian Constantin reports that according to a DIICOT press release (in Romanian), the remote administration system used by the…
Ca: Breach of Confidentiality?
saskatoonhomepage.ca reports that a man who bought surplus boxes from Saskatchewan Government Insurance (SGI) discovered that the boxes were not empty. They contained some insurance files with personal information. The agency is investigating and the privacy commissioner has been notifed.