UK lawmakers question Lloyds over account glitch that exposed customers' details


Charlie Nunn, CEO of Lloyds Banking Group's arrives for a Business Council meeting with Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at Downing Street in London, Britain, February 14, 2024. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

LONDON, March 17 (Reuters) - ⁠Britain's cross-party Treasury Committee has requested further ⁠explanation from Lloyds Banking Group over the ‌causes of a glitch on March 12 that let some customers see other users' transactions on the bank's digital channels.

"On ​the face of it, this is ⁠an alarming breach ⁠of data confidentiality," committee chair Meg Hillier wrote to ⁠Lloyds ‌CEO Charlie Nunn in a letter dated March 17.

Lloyds said at the time ⁠that it was investigating the causes and ​had swiftly ‌resolved the issue.

Hillier asked Lloyds to provide details ⁠including the ​nature of the glitch, a timeline of its response, what personal information was inadvertently disclosed, and how ⁠it may compensate affected customers.

The ​incident comes amid wider scrutiny of the robustness of banks' digital channels such as apps and websites, ⁠as lenders in Britain slash their physical branch networks to cut costs and shift customers online.

The Treasury Committee last year said that nine top UK ​banks and building societies had ⁠suffered at least 803 hours of unplanned technology ​and systems outages between January ‌2023 and February 2025, blocking ​millions of customers from accessing their cash.

(Reporting by Lawrence White, Editing by Iain Withers)

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