Privacy czar concerned about students’ personal info as scope of data breach revealed
The federal privacy watchdog says he’s “concerned” about a cybersecurity breach involving a student information system used across Canada, as the country’s largest school board revealed the scope of the data that may have been stolen last month.
The Toronto District School Board told parents and guardians in an email Monday that its students’ birthdays, addresses, health card numbers, emergency contacts and some medical information stored since September 2017 may have been included in the data breach involving the PowerSchool platform.
Certain “historical student information” – including health card numbers and home addresses – from September 1985 through August 2017 was also compromised, the school board said.
Privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne said in a statement on Monday that his office is in touch with the U.S.-based PowerSchool, which provides the affected software to schools across North America.

