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forum: Leftovers

 

#1 Tue 20 Nov 07 11:14pm

abdullahcohn

Occupation Occupied
From My House
Member since Fri 11 Nov 05
No of posts 2370

Missing: 25m people's personal data, anyone missing money yet?

Missing: 25m people's personal data
Press Association
Tuesday November 20, 2007 7:23 PM


Computer discs holding sensitive personal data on 25 million people and 7.25 million families have gone missing, Chancellor Alistair Darling has admitted to MPs.

He said the details included names, addresses, dates of birth, Child Benefit numbers, National Insurance numbers and bank or building society account details.

Paul Gray, chairman of her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC), which lost the discs containing the Government's entire Child Benefit database, has resigned over the affair.

The staggering scale of the loss means information on senior politicians, police officers and leading industrialists will be included in the missing data, which contains records on nearly half the UK's 60.5 million population. MPs gasped as Mr Darling revealed the scale of the loss in an emergency statement to the Commons.

The Metropolitan Police is now leading the hunt for the two password-protected discs and trying to discover how they went astray in transit from benefit headquarters in Newcastle to the National Audit Office (NAO) in London.

Mr Darling said they should not even have been sent in the first place, as a junior official breached all Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs standing procedures by transferring them via couriers TNT to the NAO.

The Chancellor stressed there was no evidence that they had fallen into criminal hands and said the public would be protected against any fraud by the Banking Code.

He told MPs: "The missing information contains details of all Child Benefit recipients: records for 25 million individuals and 7.25 million families. These records include the recipient and their children's names, addresses and dates of birth. It includes Child Benefit numbers, National Insurance numbers and, where relevant, bank or building society account details."

That effectively means the personal details of virtually every family in the country with a child under 16 have gone missing. Child benefit can be paid up to the age of 20 if the teenagers are studying for A-levels or on an approved training scheme.

The HMRC official who sent the CDs did not tell senior officials about the loss because they assumed the package was delayed, the HMRC said. The official believed the package was delayed by the postal strike or the NAO's office move and "hoped that it would turn up" and so kept quiet, an HMRC spokeswoman said.

Copyright (c) Press Association Ltd. 2007, All Rights Reserved.

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#2 Tue 20 Nov 07 11:25pm

abdullahcohn

Occupation Occupied
From My House
Member since Fri 11 Nov 05
No of posts 2370

Re: Missing: 25m people's personal data, anyone missing money yet?

lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol
I know this can result in people nicking all the money from my bank account, but this is funny!!!!!!!

lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol
How can they post all of our details in a single letter with two cds inside it and not even bother to record deliver it?
lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol

lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol  lol
If all of my money gets nicked, I don't care, this is so funny it's worth it!

Oh just remembered, the UK is a nuclear state, I wonder if the man with his finger on the red button is any smarter than the one who posted the CDs?
Do they have better safeguards to make sure someone doesn’t accidentally fall on the red button than they had against someone saving over 27 million peoples’ Bank details, addresses, national insurance numbers and all other details needed to withdraw money from bank accounts on a couple of cd and then posting them to an unknown location?

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