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Don't worry – this can't happen |
The
BBC are reporting that the hacking group Anonymous have caused the
Home Office website to be taken out of service.
Under no circumstances should this be taken as
an example of what could happen if the Cabinet Office have their way and
all public services are delivered over the web.
The public can safely remain entirely confident that this could never happen to the
G-Cloud, for example, the "government cloud" on the web in which
Her Majesty's Government plan to store all our data. All our tax records and pension records and benefits records and health records and housing records and travel records (
eBorders) and
Companies House records and
Charity Commission records and criminal records and
military records and energy infrastructure records and driving licences and passports and the
Government Gateway and ... all tucked up in the G-Cloud and all as safe as houses.
The
Chinese would be
quite incapable of pulling off the
same trick as Anonymous, a small group of
gifted amateurs. Nor could the
Russians. Or an
undergraduate class at the University of Michigan.
Admittedly, the
OECD recommend that "
cloud computing creates security problems in the form of loss of confidentiality if authentication is not robust and loss of service if internet connectivity is unavailable or ...".
And
ENISA, the EU's information security agency, say that cloud computing "
should be limited to non-sensitive or non-critical applications and in the context of a defined strategy ... which should include a clear exit strategy".
But here in the UK,
cyber security is masterminded by the arch-moderniser
Francis Maude – and
what could be more modern than to use the web for all government business?
Not that there's any need to address any enquiries to them or to anyone else. Francis Maude, Martha Lane Fox, St Augustine, Tony Blair, Ian Watmore, Andy Nelson, Chris Chant, Denise McDonagh and ex-
Guardian man Mike Bracken know what they're doing. They are to be trusted implicitly.
As the
BBC report says, the Home Office "
have put all potential measures in place and will be monitoring the situation very closely". There really is nothing to see here. "Potential measures" are in place. Not just some of them. All of them. It is simply impossible that access to the G-Cloud should ever be cut off:
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Don't worry – this can't happen |