UK councils fall short on data protection

Little encryption and poor disaster recovery plans

Written by Ian Williams

UK councils are falling woefully short when it comes to protecting sensitive data, according to a recent study by data security firm BeCrypt.

The survey, conducted among 60 councils, London boroughs and police authorities, investigated how public sector organisations approach the legal requirements for mobile working and data security.

BeCrypt's Public Sector Data Security Survey found that 43 per cent of respondents admitted that no data is encrypted by their organisation.

Around 45 per cent said that data on some computers carrying sensitive material is encrypted, and only 10 per cent said that data on all machines is encrypted.

The survey also asked about disaster recovery plans in the event that employees may not be able to get to work, and how important mobile working is to the organisation, including questions on data leakage and the use of USB devices.

"The survey provided a useful piece of quantifiable research to assess how public sector organisations approach the increasing requirement for mobile working and the challenges that surround it," said Richard Brooks, EMEA director of sales at BeCrypt.
"The use of laptops, USB devices and other removable media are posing an increasing risk to data security.

"The survey highlights that 30 per cent of councils have no policy regarding the use of USB devices and the inadvertent or malicious threat of data leakage.

"It is evident that such organisations require a security policy and encryption solutions that enable that policy to be implemented."

Nearly four in 10 local authorities allow limited use of USB devices and implement port control security, and two per cent implement a total ban.

Furthermore, only eight per cent of those surveyed had a full disaster recovery plan in place.

The apparent lack of adequate data protection is even more worrying given that 38 per cent of respondents said that their organisation had suffered at least one incident during the past year in which a notebook was lost or stolen.

See also:

reader comments

related articles

Red faces as government laptop goes missing

High value data stolen 08 Oct 2007

 

McAfee buys into encryption market

Security vendor pays $350m for SafeBoot 09 Oct 2007

UK police can now demand encryption keys

Dormant piece of RIP Act activated to catch terrorists and paedophiles 03 Oct 2007

Andy McNab's laptop nabbed by thief

Who dares nicks 14 Sep 2007

Brits 'too lazy' to prevent ID theft

Survey uncovers widespread apathy 04 Oct 2007

US experts call for tougher data laws

CSIA steps up lobbying 04 Oct 2007

Local authorities lax on data security

Some 90 per cent not sufficiently protecting data 15 Oct 2007

BBC partner loses children's data

Beeb apologises for Objective Productions loss 11 Aug 2008

EU travellers losing 3,300 laptops a week

European airports a hub for lost notebooks 31 Jul 2008

latest news

Comms-care mourns loss of managing director

Staff vow to continue business as usual in memory of Scott Yates who passed away at the weekend 13 Oct 2008

UK business failures hold firm

Despite the credit crunch, the number of UK firms hitting the wall increased just 3.2 per cent between Q1 and Q3 13 Oct 2008

Infosys abandons Axon bid

Bad tidyings for outsourcing sector as Infosys pulls out of bid for UK firm and slashes growth forecasts 13 Oct 2008

Most commented stories

poll

Education gap?

Education gap?

Is there still business up for grabs in the education space?

Previous poll results

Vendor Q&A Session: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

Vendor Q&A Session: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

During this Q&A session Rick Wallis, UK Sales Director at NEC Computers, talks about the firm’s reasons for committing to a 100 per cent channel strategy

In The Studio with CRN: Dave Poskett, HP

CRN TV catches up with Dave Poskett, director of Solutions Partner Organisation for the UK & Ireland at HP

events

Channel Awards logo

CRN Channel Awards 2008

The Channel Awards recognise excellence and exceptional performance from businesses and individuals in the UK technology channel

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation