Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Privacy Commissioner Raps B.C. For Massive Privacy Protection Failure

The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2016 12:45 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's privacy watchdog says the Education Ministry failed to protect the personal information of millions of students and teachers when it lost a hard drive containing 30 years of information.
     
    An investigation report by Elizabeth Denham says the ministry did not secure a portable hard drive containing personal information of 3.4 million B.C. and Yukon students and teachers.
     
    The hard drive, which wasn't encrypted and would allow easy access to the information, was reported missing last August after an extensive search by up to 50 bureaucrats at a secret government warehouse.
     
    The report says the ministry breached the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act when it failed to protect the information.
     
    Denham makes nine recommendations to strengthen the security of personal information, including encrypting all mobile data storage devices and maintaining accurate inventories of personal information.
     
    The government said the data on the hard drive contains names, grades, postal codes and personal education numbers of students, and includes potentially sensitive information about children in care and teacher retirements.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime

    Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime
    Yaman Alqadri still remembers the emotionally draining and painful moments she suffered in the months before her arrival in Canada from Syria in April 2012. 

    Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime

    Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn

    Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn
    Oilfield security firms say they've been dealing with more troublemakers in recent months with the crude price cratering and bringing drilling activity and jobs down with it.

    Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus
    The 15-year-old defendant is accused of pushing the older boy under the wheels of a moving school bus outside Sydney Academy last winter.

    Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force
    A report of an aircraft distress call that prompted officials to close part of the Trans-Canada Highway in Alberta for a possible emergency landing has turned out to be false.

    Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

    Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

    The Progressive Conservatives and the New Democrats are opposed to the sale of Hydro One, warning it will lead to higher electricity prices.

    Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

    Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children

    Jury selection is set to begin Monday in the second trial of a former Quebec cardiologist who is charged with first-degree murder in the slayings of his two children.

    Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children