Hong Kong Government Loses Laptops Containing Personal Data of 3.7 Million Voters (hongkongfp.com) 19
New submitter fatp writes: Hong Kong Free Press reports that the Registration and Electoral Office (REO) has lost two laptops containing the personal data of all 3.7 million voters after the chief executive election [on Sunday]. The REO said "the personal data was encrypted and there was no evidence that it had been leaked." Only 1,194 people had right to vote in the election.
Re: HK EQUALS CHINA (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The only thing more insecure than walking around China with millions of voters personal info on laptops. Lol
Poorly worded summary (Score:1)
The article doesn't state only a subset can actually vote but that the data loss also contained their equivalent to the electoral college's full names as well.
the 1194 votes (Score:5, Informative)
The election committee has 1200 people, which covers a variety of official posts, industry representatives, etc. Some are ex officio (e.g. Legislative Council members) . Three member posts are vacant and three members are overlapped (i.e. hold mulitple posts due to their ex officio posts).
Re: (Score:2)
Thanks for explaining what "Only 1,194 people had right to vote in the election." was apparently supposed to mean.
Maybe next time we can get the summary written in English.... I know, new here.
Re: (Score:3)
The telephone book analogy is close.
As in other modern societies, the electoral roll is a public record. It contains no secrets. But we still don't want telemarketers getting hold of it.
Re: (Score:2)
Bigly (Score:2)
Just build a Great Firewall and make the mainland pay for it.