Choicepoint Roundup, March 2
- A Canadian blogger, PIPEDA, points to Scott Bradner’s column at Network World, as well as an LA Times story [link to http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/latimests/20050302/ts_latimes/choicepointhadearlierdataleak no longer works] (at Yahoo News) on an earlier breach. It’s a good thing California gave us 1386, or this would have been swept under the rug, too.
- Stephan Brands at Identity Corner points to a column at DM Review, which argues that companies need an integrated privacy strategy, not law by law response.
- Bruce Schneier comments on the words of Choicepoint’s CISO.
- Declan McCullagh and Robert Lemos have a joint story at news.com.com about the perfect storm for privacy.
- The Open Society Paradox lists some possible benefits of the data warehouses. I don’t disagree, but believe that the companies need to take some responsibility for data quality.
In the irony department, his comments are broken, so I’ll say here that I explicitly stated that loans were a different case than depositing my cash with a bank. - Kemplog has interesting comments on the future, including a bill requiring ID to vote. Who’s subjecting our basic rights to licensing? What happens if I’m not carrying ID while speaking freely?
- PI News Link lists a number of bills that would affect all of our privacy, and in the process, make PI’s lives harder.
- Jim Horning points to a SFGate story about a private individual who checks up on what the gossip mongers are saying, and finds that his address is available online, even though its in no public record.
- Finally, today’s Two Minutes Hate comes as Constantpated asks, if there’s all this data, why isn’t it protecting us?
[All my Choicepoint posts can be found here. Update: Forgot to attend TMH! Oh no! It’s Room 101 for me.]
From the “Won’t Get Fooled Again” department, it seems as though CPS had been hit by this kind of fraud before:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/choicepoint_identity_theft