Bigger databases increase risks, says Information Commissioner

Glyn Wintle, 29 October 2008

The number of data breaches reported to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has soared to 277 since HMRC lost 25 million child benefit records nearly a year ago. New figures, released today by the ICO, include 80 reported breaches by the private sector, 75 within the NHS and other health bodies, 28 reported by central government, 26 by local authorities and 47 by the rest of the public sector. The ICO is investigating 30 of the most serious cases.

...It is time for the penny to drop. The more databases that are set up and the more information exchanged from one place to another, the greater the risk of things going wrong. The more you centralise data collection, the greater the risk of multiple records going missing or wrong decisions about real people being made. The more you lose the trust and confidence of customers and the public, the more your prosperity and standing will suffer. Put simply, holding huge collections of personal data brings significant risks.

Source:Information Commissioners Office Press Release
Richard Thomas, the Information Commissioner speech to RSA Conference Europe on data breaches