Flanders today APRIL 17, 2013
news
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business
Bound for Syria
Tracking biodiversity
Flemish cities are looking for ways to limit the flight of their young people to fight in Syria 4
A new monitoring system will tell us what’s growing – and what’s flying through the air – in Flanders 9
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science & education
w w w. fla n d e r s t o d ay. e u
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tourism
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living
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agenda
Time travel A clock museum, Moroccan heritage and the threat of mould all figure in the vast diversity of Heritage Day
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© Corbis
Erkenningsnummer P708816
#276
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fr e e n e w s w e e kly
Lock up your data
Recent online privacy breaches should put data security at the top of Flanders’ digital agenda Linda A Thompson
From addresses and birthdays to relationships and credit card details, huge parts of all our lives are now stored online, and we trust agencies and corporations to keep them safe. But a series of recent data leaks should have us questioning just how safe the brave new digital world really is and how security can be improved.
A
round mid-December, news reports surfaced that the personal information of hundreds of solar panel owners in Flanders had been briefly accessible to anyone with a login and password to the website of the Flemish energy regulator, VREG. Just before Christmas, an online data leak at the railway operator NMBS Europe exposed the names, addresses and birthdates of 700,000 international customers.
Two weeks later, the job-search website Jobat involuntarily dumped the salary details of 4,000 users online. These were just the latest in a string of data leaks that have raised tricky questions about consumer rights, privacy and accountability in a brave new digital world that is moving increasingly quickly. The data breaches have played an important role in alerting businesses, government agencies and consumers in Flanders to ``continued on page 3