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New pension service body begins operations

New pension service body begins operations

TOKYO, Japan - Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Akira Nagatsuma addresses an inaugural ceremony for Japan Pension Service in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on Jan. 4, 2010. Japan Pension Service began full operations the same day to succeed the Social Insurance Agency, which was shut down at the end of last month after a pension records mishandling scandal.

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New pension service body begins operations

New pension service body begins operations

TOKYO, Japan - Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Akira Nagatsuma (R) and Takashi Kiriku, head of Japan Pension Service, shake hands after an inaugural ceremony for the organization in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on Jan. 3, 2010. Japan Pension Service began full operations the same day to succeed the Social Insurance Agency, which was shut down at the end of last month after a pension records mishandling scandal.

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New pension service body begins operations

New pension service body begins operations

TOKYO, Japan - Takashi Kiriku (standing R), head of Japan Pension Service, addresses an inaugural ceremony of the organization in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on Jan. 4, 2010. Japan Pension Service began full operations the same day to succeed the Social Insurance Agency, which was shut down at the end of last month after a pension records mishandling scandal.

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Japan Pension Service failed to prepare for cyberattacks

Japan Pension Service failed to prepare for cyberattacks

Toichiro Mizushima, president of the Japan Pension Service, speaks at a press conference in Tokyo on Aug. 20, 2015. The JPS released an internal survey report saying that the JPS had failed to prepare for cyberattacks, allowing its data on about a million people to be leaked through a cyberattack in May. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Data on 12,000 people feared leaked from Tokyo chamber of commerce

Data on 12,000 people feared leaked from Tokyo chamber of commerce

Hideo Takano, executive director of the Tokyo Chamber of Commerce and Industry, attends a press conference in Tokyo on June 10, 2015, to announce that personal data on more than 12,000 people, mostly those of member firms of the chamber, may have leaked following a virus attack. The revelation followed a massive data leak from the Japan Pension Service. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Data on 12,000 people feared leaked from Tokyo chamber of commerce

Data on 12,000 people feared leaked from Tokyo chamber of commerce

Hideo Takano, executive director of the Tokyo Chamber of Commerce and Industry, attends a press conference in Tokyo on June 10, 2015, to announce that personal data on more than 12,000 people, mostly those of member firms of the chamber, may have leaked following a virus attack. The revelation followed a massive data leak from the Japan Pension Service. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Japan Pension Service mails apology letter over data leak

Japan Pension Service mails apology letter over data leak

Japan Pension Service employees prepare at its headquarters in Tokyo on June 3, 2015 to mail letters of apology over the recent leaking of data of some 1.25 million people. Names, pension ID numbers plus other personal information leaked as a result of a cyberattack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Toichiro Mizushima, head of the Japan Pension Service, expresses an apology at a lower house panel in Tokyo on June 3, 2015, after announcing on June 1 that data including names and ID numbers of about 1.25 million people in Japan's universal public pension program have been leaked following unauthorized access triggered by a virus mail attack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Toichiro Mizushima, head of the Japan Pension Service, expresses an apology at a lower house panel in Tokyo on June 3, 2015, after announcing on June 1 that data including names and ID numbers of about 1.25 million people in Japan's universal public pension program have been leaked following unauthorized access triggered by a virus mail attack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Pension data leak caused by infected e-mail attachment

Pension data leak caused by infected e-mail attachment

Photo shows the headquarters of the Japan Pension Service in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on June 2, 2015, the day after the institution acknowledged that data including names and ID numbers of about 1.25 million people in Japan's public pension program have leaked following unauthorized access triggered by an infected e-mail attachment. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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1.25 mil. pension data items leaked after unauthorized access

1.25 mil. pension data items leaked after unauthorized access

Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Yasuhisa Shiozaki speaks to reporters at the parliament house in Tokyo on June 2, 2015, regarding the leak of 1.25 million pension data items after unauthorized access. The leak was confirmed the previous week after an infected e-mail attachment was opened by a member of staff of the Japan Pension Service. Sources said that the title of the e-mail is the same as a pension-related document which was released by the ministry. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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1.25 mil. pension data items leaked after unauthorized access

1.25 mil. pension data items leaked after unauthorized access

Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Yasuhisa Shiozaki (C) speaks to reporters at the parliament house in Tokyo on June 2, 2015, regarding the leak of 1.25 million pension data items after unauthorized access. The leak was confirmed the previous week after an infected e-mail attachment was opened by a member of staff of the Japan Pension Service. Sources said that the title of the e-mail is the same as a pension-related document which was released by the ministry. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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1.25 mil. pension data items leaked after unauthorized access

1.25 mil. pension data items leaked after unauthorized access

Toichiro Mizushima (front), head of the Japan Pension Service, offers an apology at a press conference at the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare in Tokyo on June 1, 2015, after announcing that about 1.25 million data items related to public pension premium payers and benefit recipients have leaked following unauthorized access triggered by a virus mail attack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Toichiro Mizushima, head of the Japan Pension Service, expresses an apology at a lower house panel in Tokyo on June 3, 2015, after announcing on June 1 that data including names and ID numbers of about 1.25 million people in Japan's universal public pension program have been leaked following unauthorized access triggered by a virus mail attack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Pension service head apologizes for data leak

Toichiro Mizushima, head of the Japan Pension Service, expresses an apology at a lower house panel in Tokyo on June 3, 2015, after announcing on June 1 that data including names and ID numbers of about 1.25 million people in Japan's universal public pension program have been leaked following unauthorized access triggered by a virus mail attack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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New pension service body begins operations

New pension service body begins operations

TOKYO, Japan - Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Akira Nagatsuma addresses an inaugural ceremony for Japan Pension Service in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on Jan. 4, 2010. Japan Pension Service began full operations the same day to succeed the Social Insurance Agency, which was shut down at the end of last month after a pension records mishandling scandal. (Kyodo)

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New pension service body begins operations

New pension service body begins operations

TOKYO, Japan - Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Akira Nagatsuma (R) and Takashi Kiriku, head of Japan Pension Service, shake hands after an inaugural ceremony for the organization in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on Jan. 3, 2010. Japan Pension Service began full operations the same day to succeed the Social Insurance Agency, which was shut down at the end of last month after a pension records mishandling scandal. (Kyodo)

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New pension service body begins operations

New pension service body begins operations

TOKYO, Japan - Takashi Kiriku (standing R), head of Japan Pension Service, addresses an inaugural ceremony of the organization in Tokyo's Suginami Ward on Jan. 4, 2010. Japan Pension Service began full operations the same day to succeed the Social Insurance Agency, which was shut down at the end of last month after a pension records mishandling scandal. (Kyodo)

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Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japan Pension Service chief Toichiro Mizushima bows in apology during a press conference in Tokyo on March 20, 2018. A Tokyo-based information processing firm assigned to process the personal data of around 5 million pensioners was found to have outsourced part of the task to a Chinese company in violation of a contract that prohibited subcontracts. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japan Pension Service chief Toichiro Mizushima bows in apology during a press conference in Tokyo on March 20, 2018. A Tokyo-based information processing firm assigned to process the personal data of around 5 million pensioners was found to have outsourced part of the task to a Chinese company in violation of a contract that prohibited subcontracts. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japan Pension Service chief Toichiro Mizushima takes questions from the press in Tokyo on March 20, 2018. A Tokyo-based information processing firm assigned to process the personal data of around 5 million pensioners was found to have outsourced part of the task to a Chinese company in violation of a contract that prohibited subcontracts. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japanese pension data entry outsourced to Chinese firm

Japan Pension Service chief Toichiro Mizushima (L) speaks to the press in Tokyo on March 20, 2018. A Tokyo-based information processing firm assigned to process the personal data of around 5 million pensioners was found to have outsourced part of the task to a Chinese company in violation of a contract that prohibited subcontracts. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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