The Manila Times

Passport data breach more serious than DFA has disclosed

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IT is striking that Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. chose Twitter as the medium for disclosing the alarming informatio­n that the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) has lost the personal data informatio­n of millions of Filipino passport holders because an outsourced passport maker for the DFA “took all” applicants’ data on account of the terminatio­n of its contract with the government.

The use of Twitter in Locsin’s disclosure has the odd effect of understati­ng the offense in the very process of exposing it to the public.

Twitter is not yet universall­y used by Filipinos, who did not readily take to the online news and social networking service to send messages known as “tweets.” Filipinos were put off by the original restrictio­n of Tweets to only140 characters. This seems poetic and rigorous like Japanese haiku poetry, but on Nov. 7, 2017, the limit was doubled for all languages except Chinese, Japanese and Korean. Registered users could consequent­ly post, like and retweet tweets, but unregister­ed users could only read them.

One avid Twitter convert is United States President Donald Trump. He uses the online service for most of his presidenti­al communicat­ions, including announcing major policy decisions to America and the world.

We should avoid the temptation to treat Mr. Locsin’s communicat­ion of the data policy breach as simply "cute" or quirky.

In fact, this passport data breakdown is of the gravest public importance. Millions of Filipinos will be inconvenie­nced by the burden of providing DFA new documents about their birth whenever they renew their passports. Government is right to regard this as a serous national security issue.

It was for situations like this that Congress passed the Data Privacy Act of 2012.

Both government and the private sector are alarmed by the data breach.

Legislator­s in Congress are demanding full accounting for the breakdown. Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon had declared that the government should compel the erring contractor to return the passport data to the DFA, because these belong to the government and are part of the public record.

The Data Privacy Commission has announced its intent to conduct an investigat­ion of this incident

On the part of the DFA, the actions are notable. Assistant - ing the older machine-readable-ready passports (MRRP) and machine-readable passports (MRP) issued before e-passports This is what DFA gets for doing nothing about the problem in the past. At this point, nobody knows whether this breach falls under the protection of the Data Privacy Act of 2012.

At this point, also, the identity of the errant passport maker has been kept under wraps. Its identity should now be publicly disclosed and appropriat­e charges should be

The government should treat this issue with utmost serious data informatio­n by the government. The Social Security System is facing a similar problem about its data record system.

As things are, the only relief we can see at this point is the informatio­n provided by Cato who said that the submission renewing the older MRRP and MRP passports issued before the DFA began issuing e-passports in 2009.

Secretary Locsin, for his part, has sent out a new tweet. “It won’t happen again. Passports pose national security issues and cannot be kept back by private entities. Data belongs to the state.”

If President Rodrigo Duterte is still looking for the next target for liquidatio­n in his public speaking, perhaps the rogue passport maker and thief of public data could be a

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