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Does anyone know the justification for allowing data out of the Home
Office on prisoners etc in a non-anonymised form?
The report said that PA Consulting were using the data for "research".
What sort of research requires full names and addresses?

Could the Office for National Statistics give other Departments guidance
on how to share data whilst protecting privacy?

Best wishes
Jane


-- 
Mrs Jane Galbraith
Honorary Research Associate
Department of Statistical Science
University College London
Gower Street
London WC1E 6BT

[log in to unmask]



> GC Weekly
> 28 August 2008
> ====================================================
> News about e-government and information-age public services in the UK and
> worldwide from Kable, publisher of GC Magazine. Please pass on this
> service to any colleagues who may like to subscribe -- see details at the
> bottom of this mail.
> ====================================================
>
> A bunch of losers
>
> Last November, HM Revenue and Customs lost its entire database of 25m
> people receiving child benefit on unencrypted, portable media. If found,
> the 7m bank accounts in that database might have been compromised. Its
> chair Paul Gray resigned, the chancellor
> issued an ashen faced apology, and government embarked on a series of
> information security reviews.
>
> Last week, the Home Office lost its entire database of prisoners in
> England and Wales, as well as details of thousands of prolific offenders
> and drug users – nearly 130,000 people in total – held on unencrypted,
> portable media. If found, it could lead to
> vigilante action against criminals and the government being sued. The home
> secretary blamed its contractor, PA Consulting, which lost the data.
>
> This is pathetic. Although the incident damages PA Consulting’s
> reputation, the Home Office is fully responsible for the loss.
>
> Since last November, many departments including HMRC have made efforts to
> improve their information security. One obvious lessons from then was that
> it should be technically impossible to download an entire database of
> personal information. The Home
> Office clearly failed to learn this.
>
> If the department was trying to undermine its case for both the National
> Identity Scheme and its desired central database of all emails, phone
> calls and other communications, it could scarcely have done better.
>
> Martin Rathfelder
> Director
> Socialist Health Association
> 22 Blair Road
> Manchester
> M16 8NS
> 0870 013 0065
> www.sochealth.co.uk
>
> If you do not wish to be on our mailing list please let us know and we
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>
>
>
> Ursula Huws wrote:
>>
>> Is this of any interest to anyone?
>> Ursula
>>
>> ---------------------------- Original Message
>> ----------------------------
>> Subject: 2nd ANNOUNCEMENT: New Techniques and Technologies for
>> Statistics
>> Conference - Brussels 18-20 February 2009
>> From:    [log in to unmask]
>> Date:    Thu, August 21, 2008 3:08 pm
>> To:
>> Cc:      [log in to unmask]
>>          [log in to unmask]
>>          [log in to unmask]
>>          [log in to unmask]
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> --
>>
>> Second announcement
>> The NTTS (New Techniques and Technologies for Statistics) seminar is an
>> international scientific conference on the impact of new technologies on
>> statistical collection, production and dissemination systems. The
>> conference is intended to stimulate and facilitate the preparation of
>> new
>> innovative projects, to encourage co-operation and possible building of
>> consortia by researchers with the aim of enhancing the quality and
>> usefulness of official statistics. The main scope is to facilitate the
>> relationship between official statisticians and researchers, in order to
>> favour the proliferation of networking and ideas.
>> This new NTTS conference will carry on the tradition of NTTS/ETK
>> conferences which have been organised in 1992, 1995, 1998 and 2001.
>> NTTS 2009 will be held in Brussels from 18 to 20 February 2009 in the
>> Charlemagne building of the European Commission.
>> Submission of abstracts is now open, until 4 November; instructions and
>> the submission form are available on the conference website:
>>
>> http://www.ntts2009.eu
>>
>> _____________________
>> NTTS 2009 Secretariat
>> Eurostat - Unit B5
>> Tel: +352 4301-34704
>> Fax: +352 4301-34149
>> E-mail: [log in to unmask]
>> Postal address:
>> European Commission
>> Eurostat Unit B5
>> BECH A2/163
>> L-2920 LUXEMBOURG
>> ---

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