
Home Office comes off worst...
By Dan Ilett
Published: 13 July 2005 17:40 BST
The UK government has suffered at least 122 computer thefts this year.
The Home Office was hit hardest of all government departments, with 95 computer thefts since January 2005.
Home Secretary Charles Clark added in a written response to Liberal Democrat Paul Burstow MP that 140 computers were stolen in 2004.
According to government information service Hansard, Burstow also asked parliamentary under-secretary for the Department of Transport Karen Buck and others the same question.
Buck replied that four computers had been stolen this year by "persons outside the department and its agencies".
Bill Rammell, minister of state for the Department for Education and Skills, admitted his department lost 14 computers to thieves last year but failed to provide details of this year's losses.
Thieves have stolen 23 computers from the Ministry of Defence this year, Don Touhig, parliamentary under-secretary for the Ministry of Defence, wrote to Burstow.
In her answer to Burstow, Jane Kennedy, a minister for the Department of Health, said her organisation did not differentiate between 44 losses and thefts last year but the cost of "incidents" totalled £39,877.
Peter Jaco, CEO of encryption firm BeCrypt, commented: "We do not believe the government is any different than any large corporation in the number of devices that are lost as a percentage of the installed base.
"The government also has policies to protect data assets with encryption products that have been approved by GCHQ. If government departments that have lost these laptops followed policies all data on the machine would be protected as it would be encrypted to meet security standards."
Hang on... Did I not see this same sort of report ...
Peter brunnen
I agree Peter. Whats more is these are Government ...
Richard Poole
...and these twats are supposed to be looking afte...
Christopher Wynne Davies
As an installer of these PCs & laptops, I can assu...
Anonymous
most likely it's inventory errors, they have them ...
Rupert
Support implementation coordination for agreed QPI, SOX and Security controls Manage one quality team member who will support these activities Main ...
In this growing area, youll have every opportunity to use your technical skills at the sharp end of our operations supporting intelligence and ...
In UK Defence, EDS is recognized as the premier company delivering information and technology services to all areas of the Ministry of Defence. This ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
July 10th: Just MASH Marketing: The Customer Reference Mashup
GMP Calibration Software Implementations: Containing Costs and Managing Risk
Braskem: Invests in Intel Processor-Based Hardware Consolidation and Standardization...
AGA Linde Healthcare Transforms Sales and Service Processes With PeopleSoft Enterprise...
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Simon Moores Why I'm planning a change of career IT just isn't fun any more…
Martin Atherton Time to green-light sustainable IT But think it through first…