13.06.17
Council hit with £100,000 fine for data protection lapse
A council has this week been slapped with a £100,000 fine by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) after a cyber-attack exposed sensitive personal information about its employees to hackers.
Over 30,000 emails were downloaded from mailboxes of people working for Gloucester City Council in July 2014, some containing financial and sensitive information about staff at the local authority.
The ICO also stated that the attack exploited the ‘Heartbleed’ software flaw, a security issue that allows individuals with the right know-how to access information being exchanged between individuals and some websites that were using a certain type of encryption software called OpenSSL.
This is despite the fact that the ICO sent explicit warnings to councils about the risk of ‘Heartbleed’ attacks around three years ago.
However, Gloucester City Council have told PSE that it is “very disappointed” by the decision by the ICO, and is considering its position whether to appeal the fine.
“This was a serious oversight on the part of Gloucester City Council,” said Sally Anne Poole, group enforcement manager at the ICO.
“The attack happened when the organisation was outsourcing their IT systems,” she added. “A lack of oversight of this outsourcing, along with inadequate security measures on sensitive emails, left them vulnerable to an attack.”
Poole stated that the council should have known that in the wrong hands, this type of sensitive information could cause substantial distress to staff.
“Businesses and organisations must understand they need to do everything they can to keep people’s personal information safe and that includes being extra vigilant during periods of change or uncertainty,” she concluded.
Gloucester City council: fine will have detrimental impact on finances
But Jon McGinty, managing director of Gloucester City Council stated that the council did not agree with the decision, adding that the fine could have a detrimental impact on the authority’s finances.
“The council takes the security of its data very seriously and remains of the view that it did take swift and reasonable steps in 2014 to prevent a data breach as soon as it was alerted to the existence of this hacking vulnerability and the availability of a security patch,” he said.
“The Heartbleed vulnerability was a threat to businesses for some time before a patch was issued by software providers.”
“There is insufficient evidence to show that the hacking event took place after the council became aware of the existence of the potential vulnerability,” McGinty continued.
“The council believes that the penalty issued by the ICO will have a serious and detrimental impact on its finances, and the services that we will be able to provide to the residents of Gloucester in the future.
“The council has invested more than £1million over the past 3 years to further improve its IT security and remains vigilant to the threats that all businesses face on a daily basis.
“The council did account for the risk of this potential fine in its accounts for 2016-17 but nevertheless its payment will only result in money being taken away from the people of Gloucester and given to Treasury.”
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