Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Data breach leads to loss of personal files of 1,400 students

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 26 January 2008
THE personal details of 1,400 Scottish students have gone missing after being sent by courier to a research firm, in the latest of a series of data breaches by public bodies.
Five boxes of forms completed by students taking part in a survey at seven colleges vanished five weeks ago. The lost data included names, addresses, dates of birth, telephone numbers and demographic information, such as ethnicity.

Bank or Nation
al Insurance details were not included on the forms, but the information could prove valuable to fraudsters.

Students at Aberdeen, Adam Smith, Anniesland, Barony, Dundee, North Highland and Telford colleges could all be affected.

The Scottish Further and Higher Education Funding Council (SFC), which commissioned the survey, yesterday wrote to warn the students of the loss.

Roger McClure, the SFC's chief executive, said: "I very much regret that this has taken place and offer my personal apologies to the students concerned.

"We are now taking extra steps to prevent such a loss recurring," he added.

A data-security expert warned that the information detailed on the forms was enough to spark identity theft. Dr David Everett, the principal consultant at data-security specialists Microexpert, said: "That is the core information you need to copy someone's identity.

"It is significant," he said. "If you have people's names, addresses and dates of birth it is a start, and the more information you have the more you can do with it."

Eight boxes containing the paper forms were sent on 13 December by Research Resource to York Consulting LLP by City Link, but only three arrived.

The aim of the Learner Choice survey, conducted between October and December last year, was to discover how students choose courses.

James Alexander, the president of NUS Scotland, said: "It is a disappointment, and I hope that procedures are put in place to make sure this doesn't happen again.

"However, students should not be discouraged from filling out surveys, because they are a key part of decision-making."

Sue Pinder, convener of the Association of Scotland's Colleges Principals' Forum, said this was a one-off incident in relation to an external survey.

Meanwhile, it emerged that Marks and Spencer broke data-protection rules after a laptop containing staff pension details was stolen during a burglary.

• Students worried about the data loss can call a special helpline on 0131-270 6056.

MILLIONS HIT BY MISSING FILES

MAY: The personal details of three million learner drivers are lost by an American company working for the UK government.

NOVEMBER: It emerges that two computer discs containing child benefit data relating to 25 million people have gone missing.

JANUARY: A Royal Navy officer's laptop containing the details of 600,000 people is revealed to have been stolen from a vehicle parked overnight in Edgbaston, Birmingham. The data included passport, National Insurance and driving licence numbers, family details and NHS numbers for 153,000 people who had applied to join the armed forces, along with the banking details of about 3,700 people.



Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 25 January 2008 10:00 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Kipling,

26/01/2008 01:33:42
How can 5 boxes of forms be lost by a courier firm ? the relevant paragraph makes it sound as if they disappeared into a black hole. That's not how courier firms operate. A driver doing a multi-drop still has to log all the pick-ups and the drops have to be signed for in order for the courier company to be paid. I did a stint twice on the telephones in two different companies and I never heard of any driver 'losing' even the smallest packet. The only way, without knowing further detail, is that the boxes got dropped, signed for by security or similar, but were not placed in a secure environment by the receiving company. Another possibility was that the driver gave them to one of the other companies en route. I would hazard a guess though that if the boxes looked similar, were stacked all together, such an error was very remote.
2

Guga II,

Rockall 26/01/2008 02:15:21
Just wait till the New Labour Sleaze and Corruption Party's ID database is either lost, stolen or sold. The sh1t will really hit the fan then.
3

Snuffy Ivy,

Aberdeen 26/01/2008 03:49:07
Keep letting it happen! Labour is digging itself into a nice deep Brown (and Browne) hole they won't be able to dig out of come the next election. The Brown(e)'s are an affront to every Scot!
4

Ross Fyffe,

Scotland 26/01/2008 04:15:39
and some of you ejits are worried about your info being on id's :-)
5

Bridged and tunnelled,

26/01/2008 05:20:56
Snuffy - the Funding Council isn't a Labour controlled organisation. It is Scottish Govt controlled ie if you want to politicise the issue, SNP.

So are they digging a parallel hole to the one Labour are digging? Are would you prefer to withdraw your comment if it no longer supports the political line you perhaps thought it did?

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.