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Oops: World Leaders' Personal Data Mistakenly Released By Autofill Error

mpicpp writes in with this story about a mistake that saw personal details of world leaders accidentally disclosed by the Australian immigration department. "With a single key stroke, the personal information of President Obama and 30 other world leaders was mistakenly released by an official with Australia's immigration office. Passport numbers, dates of birth, and other personal information of the heads of state attending a G-20 summit in Brisbane, Australia, were inadvertently emailed to one of the organizers of January's Asian Cup football tournament, according to The Guardian. The U.K. newspaper obtained the information as a result of an Australia Freedom of Information request. Aside from President Obama, leaders whose data were released include Russian President Vladimir Putin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Chinese President Xi Jinping and British Prime Minister David Cameron. The sender forgot to check the auto-fill function in the email 'To' field in Microsoft Outlook before hitting send, the BBC reports."

4 of 140 comments (clear)

  1. Heads of state, and David Cameron by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    personal information of the heads of state attending a G-20 summit [...] British Prime Minister David Cameron

    A minor consitutional note, but David Cameron isn't a head of state. Queen Elizabeth is, but she doesn't have a passport, as they're issued in her name, and in any case she can just flash a tenner at passport control as ID, or just say "I'm the bloody queen, mate" and be done with it.

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    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  2. Which one of his birthdates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Which one of Barrack Obama's - if that is his real name - birthdates and social security numbers were released? He is known to have stated several different at various times.

  3. Re: Passport numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Heads of state probably go through the border security process used primarily by airplane/airport staff.

    I went through it once at Tokyo Narita airport (long story), there was no queue, my passport was scanned and fingerprint taken in about 5 seconds (despite nobody there speaking english and no written english instructions).

  4. Re:Passport numbers by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They surely never have to bother with this on their own. It's handled all by their underlings, of course. I suppose one way to explain it would be that it might cause some minor political embarrassment if it were revealed the head of state / elected leader didn't have a passport, and therefore, technically speaking, was actually breaking the law when traveling abroad. They don't really *need* it, of course, but bureaucracies, if nothing else, tend to mind their p's and q's. The sender undoubtedly intended to send that information to another civil servant for properly processing it in some mundane fashion, as they tend to do. I'm betting 1000 to 1 that it was for no interesting or glamorous reason other than fulfilling a bureaucratic rule or an information filing law.

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    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.