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tonight dismissed the prospect of more Covid curbs as he warned people to brace for a stormy few weeks - but insisted the country can 'ride out' the  wave.<br>At a  press conference, the PM said that he would be recommending to Cabinet tomorrow that the 'balanced' Plan B restrictions stay unchanged.<br>He stressed that despite the  going on a 'war footing' and daily cases hitting an eye-watering new high of 218,000, there should be no need to 'shut down our country again'.<br>'We have a chance to ride out this Omicron wave without shutting down our country once again,' Mr Johnson said.<br><br>He was backed by chief medic Chris Whitty, who confirmed that there is no sign of a 'surge' in mortality rates and said boosters offer 88 per cent protection against needing hospital treatment.<br>Although he said he could not 'rule anything out' completely and much will depend on how quickly Omicron peaks, the premier made clear he intends to rely on people to 'implement Plan B carefully and to behave carefully with other people'.  <br>However, Mr Johnson stopped short of making any changes to self-isolation rules that are threatening to bring core services to a standstill. <br>Today's new infection number represents a 58 per cent rise compared to last week but includes several days of backlogged cases in Wales and Northern Ireland.<br>Hospitalisations also continued to rise today with England recording 1,819 on January 1, the latest date with data, marking a 42 per cent rise on the previous week. Here is more information in regards to [https://slotcomment.com/free-credit เครดิตฟรี] visit the site.   <br>But the statistics do not differentiate between patients that were admitted primarily for Covid and those who were admitted for a different illness and tested positive after admission. So-called 'incidental' admissions now make up about a third of all Covid inpatients, and fewer patients primarily sick with Covid are needing to be hooked up to ventilators. <br>Explaining his position, Mr Johnson said that anyone thinking the pandemic is over would be 'profoundly wrong' and it was a 'moment for the utmost caution'.<br><br>The NHS is doing an 'amazing job' under 'huge pressure', he said. <br>But he stressed the situation was different from earlier in the crisis in key respects, and it was possible to rely on booster jabs and the health service - including a 'territorial army' of retired medics and nurses - while keeping society running.   <br>'First, we now know that Omicron is milder than previous variants, so while hospital admissions are rising quickly, with over 15,000 Covid patients now in hospital in England alone, this is not yet, thankfully, translating into the same numbers needing intensive care that we saw in previous waves,' he said.<br>'Second, thanks to the fantastic national effort to get Britain boosted, we now have a substantial level of protection, higher than any of our European neighbours, with over 34million boosters administered, including in England reaching more than 90 per cent of the over 70s and 86 per cent of the over 50s.<br>'And so, together with the Plan B measures that we introduced before Christmas, we have a chance to ride out this Omicron wave without shutting down our country once again.<br>'We can keep our schools and our businesses open and we can find a way to live with this virus.'<br>He said 100,000 essential workers in areas such as nuclear and air traffic control will get daily tests to try to catch cases early before they spread.  <br>In other developments today:<br>Mr Johnson said it is 'absolutely crazy' that people are not taking up booster appointments, amid claims two million are still available this week;The PM has rejected calls to cut the Covid isolation period again to five days, saying doing so could make the staffing crisis even worse;Hospital admissions for Covid in London fell for the first time since before Omicron took off, spurring hopes that the worst of the wave may have peaked;Britons shouldn't be offered a fourth Covid jab until there is more evidence, according to the head of the country's vaccine body, who warned dishing out vaccines every six months was 'not sustainable';Pre-return Covid international travel tests are expected to be scrapped tomorrow        more videos                                                                          <br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.molFeCarousel.init('#p-17', 'channelCarousel', <br>"activeClass" : "wocc",<br>"pageCount" : "3.0",<br>"pageSize" : 1,<br>"onPos": 0,<br>"updateStyleOnHover": true<br>);<br>);<br>At a Downing Street press conference, Boris Johnson said that he would be recommending to Cabinet tomorrow that Plan B restrictions stay unchanged<br>       <br>         The empty concourse at Victoria train station, central London, today as rail passengers are hit by disruption on the first working day of the year in England and Wales due to a combination of faults and coronavirus-related staff shortages<br>         The West Park recycling centre in Long Eaton has seen dozens of fly tippers litter the floor with waste as people desperately tried to empty their homes of leftover materials following the festive period over New Year's weekend<br>        A person walks past Christmas trees discarded on the pavement, in west London, Britain, January 3, 2022.<br><br>Many people are simply throwing their Christmas trees outside to rot<br>         <br>         <br>         <br>          <br>          <br>          Road congestion levels in London were at 22 per cent in the 8am to 9am slot this morning (far right) according to TomTom<br>          more videos                                                                          <br><br>DM.later('bundle', function()<br>DM.molFeCarousel.init('#p-40', 'channelCarousel', <br>"activeClass" : "wocc",<br>"pageCount" : "3.0",<br>"pageSize" : 1,<br>"onPos": 0,<br>"updateStyleOnHover": true<br>);<br>);<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox news halfRHS" data-version="2" id="mol-1223b420-6d4a-11ec-95d9-274687643895" website says NO new Covid curbs as country &apos;ride out&apos; Omicron wave
 was today told it will have to pay a record £183million fine for a data breach that saw card details of more than 380,000 customers stolen from its website and app.<br>The Information Commissioner's Office has imposed the huge cash penalty on the airline - equivalent to 1.5 percent of its turnover in 2017 - after one of the most serious cyber attacks to hit a UK history last year.<br>BA called in the police in September 5, 2018 after a cyber attack was detected by staff - 16 days after it started on August 21.<br>         British Airways has been handed a huge £183 million fine after card details of more than 380,000 customers were stolen from its website and app<br>During the data breach tens of thousands of customers had their name, billing address, email address, card payment information - including card number, expiry date and their CVV security code - potentially compromised.<br>Hundreds of thousands more had their personal details taken without their CVV code captured,  [https://validcc.site validcc.Pro review] it was said.<br>British Airways chairman Alex Cruz said today the airline was 'disappointed' by the initial finding - despite initial warnings the fine could be up to £500million.<br>He said: 'British Airways responded quickly to a criminal act to steal customers' data.<br><br>We have found no evidence of fraud/fraudulent activity on accounts linked to the theft. We apologise to our customers for any inconvenience this event caused.'<br>IAG chief executive Willie Walsh said it would consider appealing the fine as it seeks 'to take all appropriate steps to defend the airline's position vigorously'. <br>   RELATED ARTICLES                  <br><br><br><br>Share this article<br>Share<br><br><br>The data breach affected  380,000 customers who booked flights online or via the BA app between April 21 and July 28, 2018, and who used a payment card. <br>BA has insisted it had told customers about the security breach as soon as it could.<br>But the cyber failure is a massive blow to the airline's once renowned reputation for [https://www.ft.com/search?q=customer%20service customer service] with some victims vowing never to use them again. <br>The stolen data did not include passport details but did include 'personal information, the airline said<br>BA said it had received no reports from customers who had had money fraudulently taken out of their account. <br>Following disclosure of the hack, BA promised to compensate affected customers and took out full-page adverts in British newspapers, including the Daily Mail, to apologise to passengers.<br>It had meanwhile described the mass theft as 'a very sophisticated, malicious, criminal attack on our website'.<br>        BA called in the police in September 5 2018 after a cyber attack was detected by staff - 16 days after it started on August 21<br>IAG is the owner of five airlines, including also Aer Lingus, Iberia, Level and Vueling, none of which were affected by the hack.<br>GDPR establishes the key principle that individuals must explicitly grant permission for their data to be used.<br>The case for the new rules had been boosted by a scandal over the harvesting of Facebook users' data by Cambridge Analytica, a US-British political research firm, for the 2016 US presidential election. <br>BA's proposed penalty is roughly 367 times the £500,000 imposed on Facebook  over the scandal. <br>Rachel Aldighieri, managing director of the Data & Marketing Association (DMA), said: 'This is the first fine the ICO has announced under the new GDPR laws and the level of the proposed fine is unprecedented in the UK, highlighting the importance all businesses should place on the security of customers' data.<br>'Data is a fundamental part of the digital economy, so maintaining its security must be a business imperative.<br><br>Trust in how brands collect, store and use data is essential to the relationship between businesses and their customers.<br>'The risks to BA go beyond the potential fines regulators can issue too, the long-term effects on customer trust, share price and public perception could have more lasting damage.' <br>

Revision as of 23:13, 11 August 2022

 was today told it will have to pay a record £183million fine for a data breach that saw card details of more than 380,000 customers stolen from its website and app.
The Information Commissioner's Office has imposed the huge cash penalty on the airline - equivalent to 1.5 percent of its turnover in 2017 - after one of the most serious cyber attacks to hit a UK history last year.
BA called in the police in September 5, 2018 after a cyber attack was detected by staff - 16 days after it started on August 21.
British Airways has been handed a huge £183 million fine after card details of more than 380,000 customers were stolen from its website and app
During the data breach tens of thousands of customers had their name, billing address, email address, card payment information - including card number, expiry date and their CVV security code - potentially compromised.
Hundreds of thousands more had their personal details taken without their CVV code captured, validcc.Pro review it was said.
British Airways chairman Alex Cruz said today the airline was 'disappointed' by the initial finding - despite initial warnings the fine could be up to £500million.
He said: 'British Airways responded quickly to a criminal act to steal customers' data.

We have found no evidence of fraud/fraudulent activity on accounts linked to the theft. We apologise to our customers for any inconvenience this event caused.'
IAG chief executive Willie Walsh said it would consider appealing the fine as it seeks 'to take all appropriate steps to defend the airline's position vigorously'. 
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The data breach affected  380,000 customers who booked flights online or via the BA app between April 21 and July 28, 2018, and who used a payment card. 
BA has insisted it had told customers about the security breach as soon as it could.
But the cyber failure is a massive blow to the airline's once renowned reputation for customer service with some victims vowing never to use them again. 
The stolen data did not include passport details but did include 'personal information, the airline said. 
BA said it had received no reports from customers who had had money fraudulently taken out of their account. 
Following disclosure of the hack, BA promised to compensate affected customers and took out full-page adverts in British newspapers, including the Daily Mail, to apologise to passengers.
It had meanwhile described the mass theft as 'a very sophisticated, malicious, criminal attack on our website'.
BA called in the police in September 5 2018 after a cyber attack was detected by staff - 16 days after it started on August 21
IAG is the owner of five airlines, including also Aer Lingus, Iberia, Level and Vueling, none of which were affected by the hack.
GDPR establishes the key principle that individuals must explicitly grant permission for their data to be used.
The case for the new rules had been boosted by a scandal over the harvesting of Facebook users' data by Cambridge Analytica, a US-British political research firm, for the 2016 US presidential election. 
BA's proposed penalty is roughly 367 times the £500,000 imposed on Facebook  over the scandal. 
Rachel Aldighieri, managing director of the Data & Marketing Association (DMA), said: 'This is the first fine the ICO has announced under the new GDPR laws and the level of the proposed fine is unprecedented in the UK, highlighting the importance all businesses should place on the security of customers' data.
'Data is a fundamental part of the digital economy, so maintaining its security must be a business imperative.

Trust in how brands collect, store and use data is essential to the relationship between businesses and their customers.
'The risks to BA go beyond the potential fines regulators can issue too, the long-term effects on customer trust, share price and public perception could have more lasting damage.'