Be careful if you are using WhatsApp

Things to consider when staff use WhatsApp

From a data protection perspective, schools should be very wary of allowing staff to use WhatsApp for work related conversations.  

Importantly, WhatsApp only allows its use for personal reasons and so any organisation using it is breaking those terms. Their terms of service state  
“You will not use (or assist others in using) our Services in ways that: (f) involve any non-personal use of our Services unless otherwise authorized by us.”
Also, the fact that members of staff can add anyone else to a WhatsApp group without their consent is of concern. If a staff member gives access to their phone contacts for WhatsApp, then they are uploading that data to Facebook without the consent of those contacts. WhatsApp protect themselves by passing the responsibility for this ‘consent’ to individual users:
 
“You provide us, all in accordance with applicable laws, the phone numbers of WhatsApp users and your other contacts in your mobile address book on a regular basis, including for both the users of our Services and your other contacts.”
Additionally, organisations must legally maintain adequate controls over legitimate business records including employee conversations if work-related. There are additional requirements around sensitive category data e.g. medical records, ethnicity. WhatsApp does not provide these controls or records. Facebook has committed WhatsApp to encryption and is moving towards messaging which gives greater levels of secrecy and anonymity.
 
Whilst you probably have Access Controls in place, you may well be unaware of what WhatsApp groups exist in your school. Even if you had a list of the groups, you cannot be sure who is on them given ‘profiles’ are typically just a mobile phone number. It is possible that former employers, contractors or even parents have ongoing access to information that they should not.
As data is stored on individuals’ phones, rather than centrally, you cannot revoke access to it. So, if employees leave then they will still have access to information, including potentially sensitive data, and there is nothing you can do about it. Whilst you can remove them for a group if you have the right permissions the messages they received/sent, whilst in the group, will remain on their phone.
It is also worth remembering that any personal data that is stored on somebody’s phone that is being used in a work content is subject to disclosure should a Subject Access Request come into the school. Also, any lost or stolen phone of staff members who are using in house chat should need to report the incident as a data breach as it contains school related information.
To learn more contact us at HERE
What to do if Your School Suffer a Data Breach

What to do if Your School Suffer a Data Breach

Data Breach: What to do if your school suffers a data breach:   Our growing reliance on technology has been compounded and increased by the coronavirus  pandemic . From working remotely, to communicating with family, to test and trace apps, to online  shopping, our...

What Schools Must do to Tackle Ransomware Crisis

What Schools Must do to Tackle Ransomware Crisis

What schools must do to tackle ransomware crisis! Cyber criminals are increasingly using ransomware to attack the education sector. The trend is most noticeable in the US, with criminals locking up school’s systems and demanding a payment to release the data, but...

Support for UK Education Sector After Growth in Cyber Attacks

Support for UK Education Sector After Growth in Cyber Attacks

The NCSC has updated an alert following the increase in ransomware attacks against the education sector National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) provides additional support for education establishments following rise in ransomware attacks since late February Spike in...