Treasury, Fed query Bloomberg on data access


(MENAFN- AFP) The Federal Reserve said Monday it had asked Bloomberg News for information on whether its journalists had inappropriately accessed private client data through its financial terminals.

The move came as Bloomberg apologized for an "error" that allowed its journalists to see client data, and one report said the system allowed access to the accounts of Fed chairman Ben Bernanke and former Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner.

"We are looking into this situation and have been in touch with Bloomberg to learn more," said a Fed spokesperson, who declined to be identified.

The US Treasury Department also was "looking into the matter," a source familiar with the matter, told AFP.

CNBC reported Sunday that a former Bloomberg employee acknowledged that he accessed usage information of Bernanke and Geithner.

Separately Monday, Bloomberg apologized for what it called an "error" that allowed reporters to see client data through its financial terminals, saying it would "strive to continue to uphold the highest standards" in its reporting.

"Our reporters should not have access to any data considered proprietary," Bloomberg editor-in-chief Matthew Winkler said in a statement posted on the news website.

"I am sorry they did. The error is inexcusable. Last month, we immediately changed our policy so that reporters now have no greater access to information than our customers have."

Bloomberg announced Friday it was curbing reporter access to certain data on its financial terminals after reports claiming its journalists used the devices to spy on Wall Street banks.

A Bloomberg spokesman acknowledged that "limited customer relationship data has long been available to our journalists," without "security-level" data, trading data or messages.

Winkler said Monday that the access standards "are almost as old as Bloomberg News," noting that "our reporters used to go to clients in the early days of the company and ask them what topics they wanted to see covered."

But the editor added that its journalists, "upon hiring, enter into a confidentiality agreement that strictly prohibits them from discussing non-public Bloomberg documents and proprietary information about the company and its clients in their reporting."

Following the recent revelations, Winkler said "we should go above and beyond in protecting data, especially when we have even the appearance of impropriety."

"We apologize for our error as it does not reflect on our culture or our heritage," Winkler said.

"And we will strive to continue to uphold the highest standards while adhering to the best practices in the industry as long as we may be fortunate to serve our customers as they would have us serve them."

The New York Post reported Friday that Goldman Sachs confronted Bloomberg over concerns that reporters at the news service had been using the financial information terminals to keep tabs on employees of the bank.

According to the report, Goldman found that Bloomberg staffers could determine which employees had logged into Bloomberg's proprietary terminals and how many times they had used particular functions.

A separate report by the Financial Times said JPMorgan Chase had also complained that Bloomberg reporters were spying on activities by bank employees.

The Bloomberg financial terminals, which are operated separately from the news service, gives banks and other financial professionals the ability to research virtually any type of financial asset and carry out trades.

A rival of Thomson Reuters, Bloomberg was founded by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is not involved in management due to his political activities.


AFP

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