Jamaica Gleaner

Teachers urged to safeguard student data

- Adrian Frater News Editor

ALOCAL cybersecur­ity expert wants teachers to take greater care in safeguardi­ng student data, following a recent incident in which hackers stole data for 14,000 Jamaican students from 16 high schools and subsequent­ly demanded a ransom for their return.

Dr Moniphia Hewling, head of the Jamaica Cyber Incident Response Team, which is assigned to the Ministry of Science, Energy and Technology, gave the warning while addressing yesterday’s 22nd annual staging of the Jamaica Teachers’ Associatio­n Helen Stills Profession­al Developmen­t Day, at the Hyatt Ziva Hotel, in Montego Bay.

During her presentati­on, Hewling made reference to a Sunday Gleaner article published on April 30, 2017, where it was reported that hackers broke into an online server on which the students’ informatio­n was stored and demanded a ransom of US$5,000 (J$640,000) for the return of the data.

RECENT EXPOSURE

“The Sunday before last, there was a newspaper article in The Sunday Gleaner, where data from several schools was exposed. I always tell people that it was not that the 16 schools were hijacked. It was just one post that had the informatio­n,” Hewling told the teachers.

“We have to be careful, as teachers and administra­tors, how we treat student data. We live in a world where data is king, data runs things, and data fetches all the money,” Hewling continued. “So you, as administra­tors and teachers, need to ensure that you have policies and procedures in place to protect the data that you are in charge of.”

Hewling also spoke to the need for policy guidelines as it regards informatio­n teachers post on social media, including Facebook and closed user groups (CUG) on Internet platforms.

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