BBC partner loses children's data

Beeb apologises for Objective Productions loss

Written by Ian Williams

Advertisement

The BBC has admitted the loss of the details of a number of children who had applied to take part in a in a new BBC1 kids cooking show called Gastronauts.

It is thought the personal details of around 250 children being stored on a memory stick was stolen from a car belonging to a member of staff at Objective Productions, the production company making the show, while parked at Ikea.

The device contained the names, addresses and mobile phone numbers of children, as well as dates when families were planning to be away.

The BBC has since informed the parents of those affected and apologised for the incident. The broadcaster has also said that, thus far, there is no indication that the data has been used for malicious purposes.

"This data was not lost by the BBC itself, but stolen from an independent production company working for CBBC. However we took the issue very seriously," said a BBC spokesman.

However, security experts have slammed the breach, saying that both parties should have ensured that the data was properly protected before being put on the memory stick.

"This loss of data clearly highlights an issue for businesses when sharing sensitive information with third parties," said Greg Day, security analyst for IT security company McAfee.

"Large organisations may feel confident in their own security practices, but problems can arise when information is being shared with third parties who may not have implemented sufficient security settings."

"This loss of information would not have posed any kind of threat if the memory stick had been encrypted. As a result of weak security procedures, the stolen data has in fact provided valuable information with which to perpetrate both virtual and physical crime."

Similarly, Jamie Cowper, director of marketing at data protection expert PGP Corporation in EMEA, believes that "previous incidents should have served as a warning" to the BBC, which should have reviewed security procedures before the event occurred.

"If there were any lessons to be learned from HMRC, it’s that data stored on removable media – be it CDs or USB sticks – is just as susceptible to loss or theft and should by no means be forgotten when it comes to enforcing corporate data security policies," said Cowper.

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Do you agree?

IT white papers

Search vnunet IThound

Top categories

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Watch

06 Aug 2008

6.14 MBEco-Entrepreneur Podcast: Landis+Gyr More...

01 Aug 2008

6.76 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

31 Jul 2008

Google privacy, lost laptops and McKinnon's extradition More...

Poll

GARY MCKINNON EXTRADITION

GARY MCKINNON EXTRADITION

Should Gary McKinnon be extradited to the US for hacking into military computers?

Previous poll results

Spotlight

Google laments AOL buy

Billion-dollar stake could cost company dear   More...

New SQL attacks emerge

Chinese sites targeted en masse   More...

Olympic WiMax likely to disappoint

Technology shift came too late, analysts say   More...

Computer bests human in Go

Supercomputer tops professional player for first time   More...

Primary Navigation