It is amazing and rather disturbing that a US federal judge has recently ordered Google to lock a gmail user out his own account despite the fact that he has done nothing wrong.
It seems that a bank accidentally sent this user a file containing sensitive information. They asked the user to destroy it without reading it, but didn't receive an answer. At that point the bank sought legal action.
Again, I am left with questions and thoughts:
- How did this happen? Did someone intend to send this sensitive file via email to a different address and simply mistyped? If so, was the sender not aware of the inherent risks in sending unencrypted email?
- Does the bank have a policy regarding sending unencrypted sensitive information over the Internet using an insecure protocol like SMTP? If so, do they have any tools to enforce it?
- How did the bank discover this mistake? Did the sender realize his or her mistake and informed the compliance / security group, or was some automated detection system in place?
- What legal responsibility does the innocent email recipient have? Sure the data is sensitive, but it was freely given to him. Can't he do what he pleases with it (short of committing crime, such as theft)?
- As much as I would like to see the prevention of information leakage, I am still disturbed by the legal precedent set here. What if they send it to a corporate email system next time? Does the government have similar authority to disrupt the business of a private organization by forcing a shut down of their Internet connection?
The onus of correcting this problem should fall 100% on the bank. They should have to compensate the affected customers. They should have to compensate the email recipient for any harm they cause him. And most importantly, they should learn their lesson and prevent this type of leak from happening again.




