Security Threat Caused by Lost USB Sticks
Yet another data breach caused by lost hardware has been reported by a governmental institution. The U.K.’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) has released information on 121 USB sticks, including five containing classified information that have been lost or stolen since 2004.
As reported by DarkReading, these troubling figures became public four years later in response to an official question from Sarah Teather, a Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament. They are the latest yet not the only embarrassing breach involving the UK government. The MoD’s missing USBs come after the loss of two disks containing welfare private data on 25 million U.K. citizens and loss of an extensive number of laptops and mobile phones.
“Far from the problem getting better, it seems actually to be getting worse at the moment,” said Teather. “I think that the government has a duty to come clean and say whether or not anyone has been put at risk as a result of this – we need reassuring, for example, that none of our troops have been put at risk.”
The British government’s latest storage snafu comes less than a year after Her Majesty Revenue and Customs (HMRC), which is the U.K’s equivalent of the IRS was at the center of the country’s largest ever data loss.
This recent events begs a mind blowing question: how many such breaches actually happened but were never released to the public? And how long would it have taken until UK authorities informed the public on these national security breaches if there hadn’t been a formal inquiry?
