The Earthquake Commission was warned last year that it risked breaching claimants' privacy, it emerged yesterday, as Prime Minister John Key came under fire for downplaying "a serious and widespread" data security problem across government departments.
Almost a year to the day after the Bronwyn Pullar ACC email blunder was first reported, EQC claims manager Susan David on Friday accidentally sent an email with an attachment containing details of 83,000 Canterbury quake claimants to insurance advocate Bryan Staples.
EQC was warned about the risk of such a security breach by claimant and IT consultant John Bryant late last year, he told the Herald.
After EQC supplied Mr Bryant with information about its data security practices Mr Bryant told the commission that its response "highlights the problem of human error and mistake which no amount of policy can overcome, and was apparently the source of some of the debacle with ACC emails being released containing information that should not have been".
Yesterday, he said that for EQC to be using "unencrypted datasets" like the spreadsheet emailed to Mr Staples, was "stupid".