uk.news.yahoo.com - Records show hundreds of data breaches involving HMRC staff
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has revealed that hundreds of staff have accessed the records of taxpayers without permission or breached security in other ways. HMRC dismissed 50 members of staff last year for accessing or risking the exposure of taxpayers’ records, according to The Telegraph.
354 tax employees have been disciplined for data security breaches since 2022, of whom 186 have been fired - and some were dismissed for accessing confidential information. HMRC holds sensitive data including salary and earnings, which staff cannot access without a good reason.
In an email to staff, the line manager of the claimant wrote: “There have been more incidents of this recently.”
John Hood, of accountants Moore Kingston Smith, said: “Any HMRC employee foolish enough to look up personal information that is not part of their usual responsibilities faces a ticking time bomb as most searches are tracked. As an additional security, some parts of the system are restricted so that only specifically authorised personnel can access them, such as the departments dealing with MPs and civil servants.”
HMRC’s annual report shows there were six incidents last year of employees changing customer records without permission, and two of staff losing inadequately protected devices.
A spokesman for HMRC said: “Instances of improper access are extremely rare, and we take firm action when it does happen, helping prevent a recurrence. We take the security of customers’ data extremely seriously and we have robust systems to ensure staff only access records when there is a legitimate business need.”
Following news of cyber incidents impacting UK retailers, the NCSC can confirm it is working with organisations affected.
NCSC CEO Dr Richard Horne said:
“The disruption caused by the recent incidents impacting the retail sector are naturally a cause for concern to those businesses affected, their customers and the public.
“The NCSC continues to work closely with organisations that have reported incidents to us to fully understand the nature of these attacks and to provide expert advice to the wider sector based on the threat picture.
“These incidents should act as a wake-up call to all organisations. I urge leaders to follow the advice on the NCSC website to ensure they have appropriate measures in place to help prevent attacks and respond and recover effectively.”
The Commission has presented a proposal to ensure an effective and efficient response to large-scale cyber incidents.
MITRE’s AI Incident Sharing initiative helps organizations receive and hand out data on real-world AI incidents.
Non-profit technology and R&D company MITRE has introduced a new mechanism that enables organizations to share intelligence on real-world AI-related incidents.
Shaped in collaboration with over 15 companies, the new AI Incident Sharing initiative aims to increase community knowledge of threats and defenses involving AI-enabled systems.