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    UN agency raises global concerns over public data security

International Telecommunication Union calls for vendors and regulators to address spiralling data security problems.

By Reuters, 3 Dec 2006 at 22:32

Computer users who still standardise on the same user name and password choices across multiple web sites, computers and services such as online banks, travel agencies and booksellers continue to run a serious risk of identity theft, according to a leading United Nations technology agency.

The International Telecommunication Union, a Geneva-based UN branch, said businesses and regulators need to find a solution to the spread of personal information on the Internet, possibly by developing more streamlined identification methods.

At the moment, the ITU said the sheer number of identifiers and passwords required from computer users made it nearly inevitable that they repeat codes.

"This may cause security breaches, and leave them vulnerable to the machinations of identity thieves ever increasing in number and inventiveness," the organisation said in its 2006 Internet report, released ahead of a major meeting of governments and industry officials in Hong Kong later today.

"The lack of coordination in identification systems is a source of growing inconvenience to users and needs to be addressed rapidly," it said.

The agency also highlighted risks to privacy from widespread Internet use, especially from marketers tracking the preferences and traffic of browsers across a variety of sites.

If people have confidence in the way such information is stored and used, the ITU said there might be no problem from the proliferation of "cookies" and other data-capturing tools, often used for targeted online advertising.

However, it warned that a breakdown in consumer trust could impede the future expansion of Internet-based commerce.

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