Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her

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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her

Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her

@suzanne2608

Mum of two and wife of one living in rural West Devon. Genealogist, dog owner & baker of cake.

Devon, UK Katılım Şubat 2009
1.4K Takip Edilen580 Takipçiler
Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
BBC News (UK)
BBC News (UK)@BBCNews·
'I can’t believe this day has come': Carol Kirkwood presents final BBC Breakfast weather forecast bbc.in/47DKYJ4
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Danny Robins
Danny Robins@danny_robins·
🚨ARE YOU READY FOR A BRAND NEW #UNCANNY SERIES?🚨👻😱 Get ready to explore the most haunted house in England, Victorian folk devils, creepy clowns, terrifying poltergeists, and the original UFO abduction case. Join me for a brand-new series, Uncanny Cold Cases starring me, Ciarán and Evelyn 👻 You can hear it as a podcast and… you can WATCH IT on the all new #UNCANNY YOUTUBE CHANNEL! Uncanny Cold Cases | Listen on BBC Sounds and watch on YouTube
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Leah Hardy 🇺🇦
Leah Hardy 🇺🇦@LeahFHardy·
I’ve been trying to get my 85-year-old mum signed on her GP’s app on her old phone for the last two hours with no luck. Keeps demanding two factor authentication apps which my mum won’t understand or to create a digital ID or passcode. This is digital exclusion.
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her
@marksandspencer could you tell me if you still sell compact ladies umbrellas in store please? My trusty one has broken & I can't see any on the website now. I was gifted mine several years ago & it was perfect.
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Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
People who rarely get sick, What's your secret
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Is it me? 🤷🏻‍♀️
Is it me? 🤷🏻‍♀️@ClareEGabriel3·
Hard lesson tonight. Credit card been used contactless fraudulently…in London buying all sorts of stuff. Thank God was credit not debit card. @LloydsBank absolutely first class in the handling of the matter. Brilliant fraud telephone helpline. Scary! 😦
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
Martin Lewis
Martin Lewis@MartinSLewis·
Lloyd's, Halifax and bank of Scotland "seeing others transactions in my app" news here... moneysavingexpert.com/news/2026/03/l… we'll update the story through the day as we learn more.
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Sam Coventry
Sam Coventry@Covey90·
@MartinSLewis I’m with Lloyds and I’m concerned that someone has seen my information surely this is a major breach of GDPR
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Martin Lewis
Martin Lewis@MartinSLewis·
Do you use the Lloyds, Bank of Scotland or Halifax apps? People have been messsaging me this morning of being shown other peoples transactions. I want to see how widespread this is. Has it happened to you. If so a) What are you seeing? Which app. b) If it is someone elses transactions does it give any of their details too (name, account number etc)?
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
BREAKING: The Word “Glitch” Is Doing the Heaviest Lifting in British Banking Today This morning, customers of Lloyds, Halifax, and Bank of Scotland opened their banking apps and found themselves staring at the complete financial lives of total strangers. Transaction histories. Account numbers. Sort codes. National Insurance numbers. DWP benefit payments. English wages appearing in Scottish accounts. Pub tabs in Newcastle showing up in Wales. One Bank of Scotland customer cycled through six different people’s full account details in twenty minutes, each refresh serving a new stranger’s financial identity like a slot machine of personal data. The banks called it a “technical glitch” and told customers not to worry. Halifax’s official response on X was to suggest logging out and back in. Lloyds asked users to “bear with them.” Bank of Scotland said they were “investigating.” Let me translate this from institutional euphemism into plain language. A banking group serving over 26 million customers had a backend failure that served authenticated financial data, including government-issued identity numbers, to random sessions. In any jurisdiction with functioning data protection enforcement, this is not a glitch. This is a reportable data exposure event under UK GDPR. The Information Commissioner’s Office requires notification within 72 hours of any breach involving personal data that poses a risk to individuals’ rights. National Insurance numbers are the skeleton key to identity fraud in Britain. They unlock tax records, benefit claims, credit applications, and pension access. Every single NI number that appeared on a stranger’s screen this morning is now a compromised credential, regardless of whether the display bug has been “quickly resolved.” The precedent is instructive. In April 2018, TSB suffered a similar failure during an IT migration from the same parent infrastructure. Lloyds Banking Group’s systems. Customers could see other people’s accounts, access funds that were not theirs, and were locked out for months. The FCA and PRA fined TSB £48.65 million. Over 225,000 complaints were filed. £32.7 million in redress was paid. The CEO was forced out. And that failure originated in a planned migration with known risk parameters. This morning’s incident at Lloyds Banking Group was not a planned migration. It was a spontaneous failure in production systems that randomly distributed live financial identities to authenticated but unrelated sessions. The fact that it was brief does not reduce the severity. It increases it. A planned migration that goes wrong reveals poor execution. A production system that spontaneously begins serving random customer data to random sessions reveals something about the underlying architecture that no amount of “quickly resolved” can address. Every customer who saw a stranger’s NI number this morning received proof that the verification promise underpinning digital banking, the promise that authentication equals isolation, failed silently and completely. The banks say your account is safe. What they mean is the display error has been corrected. These are not the same statement. The question is not whether it was fixed. The question is whether anyone took screenshots during those twenty minutes. And whether the ICO and FCA will treat this as what it is.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
BBC Breakfast
BBC Breakfast@BBCBreakfast·
Lloyds, Bank of Scotland and Halifax apps showing customers other users' transactions bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
BBC Breaking News
BBC Breaking News@BBCBreaking·
Lloyds, Bank of Scotland and Halifax apps showing customers other users' transactions bbc.in/4sFipmm
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
Lloyds
Lloyds@LloydsBank·
@_LizzieA I appreciate your concern. If you'd like to make a complaint, you'll find the ways in which you can make a complaint here: spr.ly/6015B6JYCf. ^Gillian
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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her retweetledi
Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her
No it is not 😡
lizzie@_LizzieA

@LloydsBank I think it’s shocking that you are telling me it’s all okay that when I log on to online banking and someone else’s account shows up and their transactions- a different person each time. This means someone is seeing my account information as well - not okay!

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Suzanne Lawrence 🧙‍♀️She/Her
This may not age well 🫤
Lloyds@LloydsBank

@PhilMyers53 As we are currently investigating the issue, and it may be the result of a technical glitch. In the meantime, please try logging out and logging back in and this should resolve the problem. Rest assured, your account remains completely safe with us.^Raj

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