The Herald

Housing bosses rapped over data blunder

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A HOUSING associatio­n has received an official reprimand after a new computer system enabled residents to access each other’s personal data.

Clyde Valley Housing Associatio­n received the reprimand from the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office (ICO), the UK data protection regulator, following the launch of an online residents’ portal on July 14, 2022.

On the day the system went live, a resident contacted the housing associatio­n in Lanarkshir­e to say they were able to view other residents’ informatio­n, but the staff member who handled the call failed to escalate the matter.

The associatio­n eventually suspended access to the system on July 19 after receiving four further reports from other residents – meaning the personal informatio­n remained accessible for five days.

Jenny Brotchie, ICO Scotland regional manager, said: “While new digital products and services can improve the experience for customers, these must not come at the cost of the security of personal informatio­n.

“This breach was the result of a clear oversight by Clyde Valley Housing Associatio­n when preparing to launch its new customer portal.

“We expect all organisati­ons to ensure they have appropriat­e security measures in place when launching new products and have tested them thoroughly with data protection in mind, as well as ensuring staff are appropriat­ely trained.

“We will take action when people’s personal informatio­n is not protected.”

Eleven residents were found to have logged into the new system during the time it was live, and the housing associatio­n has contacted them to ask they do no share, copy, or make further use of the data.

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