Times Colonist

LifeLabs ordered to improve security

Privacy commission­ers come down hard on company after massive hack last November

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TORONTO — One of Canada’s largest medical services companies failed to put in place reasonable safeguards to protect the personal health informatio­n of millions of Canadians, say the privacy commission­ers in B.C. and Ontario.

LifeLabs revealed last November that hackers gained access to the personal informatio­n of up to 15 million customers, almost all in Ontario and B.C., and that the company paid a ransom to retrieve and secure the data.

The breach was determined to have affected millions of Canadians and the privacy commission­ers announced their joint investigat­ion in mid-December.

A statement released Thursday by the commission­ers says the breach last year broke Ontario’s health privacy law and B.C.’s personal informatio­n protection law.

The joint investigat­ion found LifeLabs collected more personal health informatio­n than was necessary, failed to protect that data in its electronic systems and relied on inadequate informatio­n technology security policies.

B.C.’s privacy commission­er and health minister say the investigat­ion shows that provincial legislatio­n should be changed to allow fines against companies that don’t protect personal informatio­n.

Michael McEvoy, the informatio­n and privacy commission­er of B.C., said the size of the breach was largest he has investigat­ed.

“This the most significan­t privacy breach I’ve ever seen in British Columbia as privacy commission­er and I think that our office has seen in many years,” he said in an interview.

Both the Ontario and B.C. offices have ordered LifeLabs to address shortcomin­gs through measures that include improving its security systems and creating written policies and practices regarding informatio­n technology security.

But McEvoy said the health care company has opposed the release of the commission­ers’ report on the grounds it contained confidenti­al and privileged informatio­n.

“LifeLabs said today, in a press release, that it’s been open and transparen­t from the outset of this matter and we hope that in the spirit of that openness and transparen­cy, they will drop any objections they have to the full publicatio­n of our investigat­ion report,” he said.

B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix backed that call.

“Public interest lies in more informatio­n being provided to build public confidence, and that’s how you respond to these things,” he said. “LifeLabs is a great company and a great partner but what this has shown is they, and all of us, have to do better.”

LifeLabs says it has accelerate­d its strategy to strengthen its informatio­n security systems, including appointing a chief informatio­n security officer to lead the improvemen­ts.

The company said it has also made efforts to improve its informatio­n security management program with an initial $50 million investment and has hired a thirdparty service to evaluate its response.

“What we have learned from last year’s cyberattac­k is that we must continuall­y work to protect ourselves against cybercrime by making data protection and privacy central to everything we do,” LifeLabs said in a statement.

Dix, who hasn’t seen the privacy commission­ers’ report, said the government made changes in its contract negotiatio­ns with LifeLabs after the data breach. Those include provisions that strengthen privacy considerat­ions and offer a place to incorporat­e the recommenda­tions from the joint investigat­ion, he said.

 ??  ?? Medical services firm LifeLabs has opposed the release of the privacy commission­ers’ report.
Medical services firm LifeLabs has opposed the release of the privacy commission­ers’ report.

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