The Post

Privacy breach shuts down online access

- Andre Chumko andre.chumko@stuff.co.nz

‘‘We take the privacy of the material we hold very seriously.’’ Anahera Morehu chief archivist, Archives New Zealand

Archives New Zealand has indefinite­ly removed access to its widely used online search system for its collection­s after restricted records containing private informatio­n became publicly visible.

Now the only way people can access Archives’ collection­s is by going into physical Archives offices and requesting physical copies of records.

On Friday, the Government record-keeping authority discovered that brief record titles containing private informatio­n were publicly visible. The full records were not available digitally and have never been accessible to the public.

‘‘We take the privacy of the material we hold very seriously,’’ chief archivist Anahera Morehu said in a statement.

Officials were now investigat­ing whether restricted records have been publicly discoverab­le.

‘‘This could, potentiall­y, have security and privacy issues which is why we have needed to make collection­s unavailabl­e to the public,’’ Morehu said.

The incident was the latest in a series of issues that the national archive had experience­d with its collection­s records management system since it went live in February, Morehu said.

Incidents over recent months included records or informatio­n associated with records ‘‘appearing in unexpected places’’, she said, and other ‘‘performanc­e issues’’ with the collection­s search tool.

That included the tool loading slowly or incomplete­ly, not performing some search functions and search results being difficult to navigate.

Other issues included an unreliable process for users to order and pay for a record to be digitised, and some users finding it difficult to create collection­s search accounts or log in with RealMe.

Archives was unable to provide a timeframe on when the online search tool would be restored, but it said officials were working with urgency on the matter.

The outage affects all users of the search tool, including those who may use it for work or research purposes.

On Tuesday night, a group of senior staff from the Department of Internal Affairs and Archives met with officials from the supplier of collection­s search, Axiell, to help fix the problem.

Morehu apologised for the impact the closure of the search would have on people.

‘‘This frustratio­n is also shared by Archives NZ and by our archivists who work with the system every day and experience the same issues.’’

Archives would keep the search system down until it had assurances that security and privacy measures were resolved.

It investigat­ed whether it could return to its previous search tool, Archway, but said this was not possible as that technology was no longer maintained, supported or able to be improved.

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