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Monday 18 November 2019 3:37 pm

TSB IT meltdown blamed on data centre test failure

By: James Warrington

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LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 09: The logo of TSB (The Trustee Savings Bank) is pictured as it re-opens on September 9, 2013 in London, England. To meet competition rules set by the European Commission, owners Lloyds Banking Group have disposed of a number of branches that will open as the TSB. (Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)

The IT meltdown that left nearly 2m TSB customers without access to online banking is set to be partly blamed on the company’s failure to test one of its new data centres.

A long-awaited inquiry by City law firm Slaughter and May has concluded that the decision to test only one of the new data centres ahead of a huge IT upgrade made it “impossible to identify the problems” with the new system, Sky News reported.

Read more: TSB IT boss ‘kept board in dark’ ahead of tech meltdown

The failure to identify these problems in turn led to a huge meltdown, which cost chief executive Paul Pester his job and TSB roughly £370m in compensation and expenses.

The report, which will be published tomorrow, is expected to outline a raft of failings at the bank, with some of the criticisms levelled at top executives.

One source told Sky News that the report will accuse the TSB board of failing to address “common sense challenges” about aspects of the upgrade.

Another insider said it had concluded that the decision not to test both data centres was taken by Sabis, the tech division of TSB’s Spanish owner Sabadell.

Read more

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Sabadell is said to have refused to cooperate with the inquiry, placing the responsibility for the meltdown with Sabis.

Yesterday it emerged that Slaughter and May’s report will also name and shame Carlos Abarca – the bank’s head of IT.

Abarca reportedly failed to warn board members about “shortcomings” with the testing of the new system, and has been accused of making an “ill-judged” assessment of the company’s readiness to go ahead with the migration.

Read more: TSB facing heaby criticism after investigation into IT meltdown

The law firm’s report is set to be followed by a joint investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority.

A TSB spokesperson said the bank does not comment on speculation, and will provide a further update “in due course”.

Main image credit: Getty

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Heathrow and several European airports are suffering from a cyber attack.

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