Compliance
Jersey Says Registry "Vulnerability" Found

The practice of holding registers of company and other information in international financial centres such as Jersey – and debates about public access to beneficial ownership data, for example – puts an added premium on the need to keep privacy and technology systems watertight.
The Jersey Financial Services Commission has recently disclosed that it has found a "vulnerability" in its registry.
In a statement, the Commission said the problem was
identified on 23 January. “This vulnerability allowed access to
non-public names and addresses. It did not link any individuals
to registered entities or roles held," it said.
“We have conducted an initial forensic review with an independent
cyber security partner. This review identified that the
vulnerability was due to a misconfiguration in our
third-party-supplied registry system, which had been implemented
in January 2021,” it said in a statement, issued last
Thursday.
Questioned by WealthBriefing on Friday, a spokesperson
in the Commission’s office said there had not been a breach with
loss of data.
In recent years, calls for public registers of beneficial
ownership of companies and trusts have been controversial. Since
a
top EU court ruling in 2022, jurisdictions
such
as the
Cayman Islands and British Virgin Islands, have rowed back
somewhat from how far they intend to go down this route, which
they nevertheless
accept . A point of contention is that while registers
may have their uses, access must follow safeguards and rules to
prevent indiscriminate data trawls. The topic highlights a
regular
debate in global wealth management about the proper limits of
legitimate privacy and transparency. Examples include vast hauls
of data being “leaked” in the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers
sagas.
The JFSC said it immediately resolved the vulnerability.
Separately, it has written to “certain individuals whose name and
address was accessed and to whom we owe an obligation to
communicate individually.”
“We deeply regret this has occurred and are currently undertaking
further investigations to determine how this happened. We have
been working throughout with the Jersey Office of the Information
Commissioner,” the statement added.
Some lawyers, such as Filippo Noseda, partner at Mishcon de Reya,
worry that data protection is at odds with transfers of
information between governments.