Revenue head quits after massive data breach
By Nicole Kobie,
The head of HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has quit following news that his department lost details of as many 15 million child benefit claimants, according to media reports.
Paul Gray resigned ahead of a statement at the House of Commons by Chancellor Alistair Darling at 3:30pm.
According to media reports, the lost data - which had been held on discs - included names, addresses, birth dates, bank details and National Insurance numbers. "There has been a big data loss," a government source told Reuters.
The BBC said ministers had been aware of the breach for some nine to 10 days.
In a letter to the HMRC, Gray wrote: "I am announcing today that I will be standing down as HMRC chairman as a result of a substantial operational failure in the department."
He added: "This is not the way I would have planned to organise my departure from HMRC."
This isn't the first data breach for the HMRC, as a laptop was stolen from a car boot last month and a disc went missing containing pensioners' details earlier this month.
Analyst firm Gartner warned that this breach could potentially be extremely dangerous because it involves bank account details, which are much more valuable than credit card numbers or tax numbers.
Analyst Avivah Litan said: "In fact, in the black market, bank account numbers sell for the highest price - or between $30 and $400, which is significantly more than the fifty cents to five dollars that criminals pay for credit cards."
Litan said all banks potentially affected will need to closely monitor all fund transfers for fraud. "If evidence emerges that the data fell into criminal hands, the UK banks may be forced to shut the 15 million accounts down and reissue new ones, at an enormous cost to them and a major inconvenience for their customers, especially since customers typically set up automated payments and transfers to their accounts. Debit cards that link to the old accounts may also have to be closed and reissued," Litan said.
HMRC declined comment, saying the reasons for the resignation would be outlined in the chancellor's statement to parliament.
You may also like...
advertisement
Latest Internet Features
Public internet access: who is responsible?
In the first of a series of articles looking at business issues faced by IT managers, we look at the steps companies need to take if they open their networks up to visitors.
- Q&A: Kevin Eyres on LinkedIn's tipping point
- What impact will the browser ballot screen have?
- Q&A: Mark Kingdon on Second Life for business
- The past, present and future of the Digital Economy Bill
- Google’s fight for its book deal
- Top 10 technologies for SMBs
- The problems facing Internet Explorer
- Google: Going back to ‘Don’t Be Evil’?
- Is it worth paying for LinkedIn?
Latest Internet Reviews
WatchGuard XCS-770 review
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Most popular
- Google Street View slammed as 'a service for burglars'
- Head to Head: Office 2010 vs Open Office 3.1
- Apple shifts 120,000 iPads on first day on sale
- Google expected to shut down China search soon
- Public internet access: who is responsible?
- HTC Legend review
- Conservatives promise 100Mbps in tech manifesto
- Google Nexus One review: A week with the superphone
- Google Nexus One UK launch confirmed for next month
- Google Nexus One's UK arrival delayed
Latest News Videos in Internet
Video: Mobile web has moved from hype to reality
Claranet's UK managing director talks to IT PRO about the mobile web and how online infrastructure in the business world is evolving.
Whitepapers
Want more background on today's hottest IT trends?
Visit IT PRO's whitepaper library for more on virtualisation, encryption and other topics.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.






