The name Rick Stanley turns some off. O.K., but even the clock that stopped running 20 years ago tells the correct time twice each day. Read on, McDuff.
Rick Stanley
Constitutional Activist
Phone: 303-329-0481
E-mail: rick@stanley2002.org
We the People Scoop 02/19/05 ** Special Edition **
==================================================
=======
WE THE PEOPLE SCOOP - TO EXPOSE! **
** Visit the website: http://www.stanley2002.org **
** Like the Scoop? Forward it to everyone you know! **
==================================================
=======
MEDIA RELEASE: They've Got Your Number (and More)
http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north345.html
They've Got Your Number (and More)
by <mailto:gary@kbot.com>Gary North
by Gary North
A potential disaster has taken place. It has received virtually no
attention. Only MSNBC has reported it. There is almost no discussion of it on the web. Had a specialist in communications issues not contacted me, I would not have heard about it.
You have probably not heard of ChoicePoint. Over the last twenty years, ChoicePoint has compiled a private data base on Americans that dwarfs anything the I.R.S. has. Unlike the I.R.S., ChoicePoint has a comprehensive computer system that is state of the art. The information covers name, address, Social Security, transactions, and much, much more.
Last week, the company notified over 30,000 people in California that it has experienced a breach in security. Hardly any of these people had ever heard of ChoicePoint.
But they are in bed with ChoicePoint, like it or not.
So are you. Here's why:
ChoicePoint maintains a dossier on virtually every American consumer, according to Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University professor and author of http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/A...62/lewrockwell/>The Digital
Person.
The Atlanta-based company says it has 10 billion records on individuals and businesses, and sells data to 40 percent of the nation's top 1,000 companies. It also has contracts with 35 government agencies, including several law enforcement agencies.
So, what exactly has happened? The company is not quite sure. Neither is the government.
Criminals posing as legitimate businesses have accessed critical personal data stored by ChoicePoint Inc., a firm that maintains databases of background information on virtually every U.S. citizen, MSNBC.com has learned.
The incident involves a wide swath of consumer data, including names, addresses, Social Security numbers, credit reports and other information. ChoicePoint aggregates and sells such personal information to government agencies and private companies.
This information caught my attention. It apparently has not caught the attention of the major news media. For them, it's a non-story, in part because the company so far has successfully downplayed it.
While the criminals had access to ChoicePoint data, it's not clear what, if any, information was stolen, said Chuck Jones, another ChoicePoint spokesman. . . .
Last week, the company notified between 30,000 and 35,000 consumers in California that their personal data may have been accessed by "unauthorized third parties," according to ChoicePoint spokesman James Lee . . .
The words "may have been accessed" are not reassuring to me. I'm in the database. Now I wonder who has access to it.
Lee said law enforcement officials have so far advised the firm that only Californians need to be notified.
Why California? Because only California requires by law that data-gathering companies notify its citizens when a breach of security takes place. So, unless you live in California, you will not be notified.
What does it all mean? We aren't sure yet. This much we know: the concerns that you have had about providing your Social Security number to strangers are now on the front burner. You have worried that someone might pass on this information to criminals, who would use this information to penetrate your accounts and start spending your money. It looks as though thieves got this information wholesale: a volume discount operation of historic proportions.
Subsequent research by ChoicePoint revealed that about 50 fake companies had been set up and then registered with ChoicePoint to access consumer data.
California consumers who received warning letters from the firm last week were "in some way connected to searches" conducted by those fake accounts, Lee said.
NO HEADLINES
When did this happen? Last October. According to ChoicePoint, there was no announcement because law authorities prohibited it.
The incident was discovered in October, when ChoicePoint was contacted by a law enforcement agency investigating an identity theft crime. In that incident, suspects had posed as a ChoicePoint client to gain access to the firm's rich consumer databases . . .
The firm was only given clearance by law enforcement officials to disclose the incident two weeks ago, Lee said.
The letters were sent as a precaution, he said.
A precaution? For what? For whom? If it's a precaution for up to 35,000 Californians, then what about you? What about me? I don't live in a "precautionary" state.
The letter urges consumers to check their credit reports for suspicious activity.
"We believe that several individuals, posing as legitimate business customers, recently committed fraud by claiming to have a lawful purpose for accessing information about individuals," it reads. "You should continue to check your credit reports frequently for the next year."
Next year? Next decade!
I think of Wilford Brimley's line in
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...25/lewrockwell/>Absence
of Malice. His character was investigating a breach of security in a
Federal prosecutor's office. The local newspaper had picked up story after story. The bureaucrat in charge of the office admitted to a leak. Brimley, playing the ultimate good old boy Southern lawyer, responded:
A leak? You call what's going on here a leak? Boy, the last time we had a leak like this, Noah built himself a boat.
The article went on to say that nothing much is being said by ChoicePoint.
The two-page letter offers details on how to spot fraud, but no additional information about the incident, or what information may have actually been stolen.
"ChoicePoint has apologized for any inconvenience this incident may cause," said ChoicePoint spokesman Chuck Jones. "But ChoicePoint has no way of knowing whether anyone's personal information actually has been accessed," or used to commit identity theft, he added.
Here is what is arguably the largest data base company on earth.
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/ID/6969799>It can't say what has or has not been breached. It is now four months after the breach took place.
Privacy consultant Larry Ponemon, who operates the Ponemon Institute, said he was surprised criminals were able to pose as ChoicePoint clients.
"What really concerns me is when low-tech methods are used to gain access, than you really have problems," said. "Obviously this is very surprising, given that they are in the data business."
Jones said ChoicePoint had adjusted its procedures to "help protect against a repeat" of the incident.
Somehow, this is not reassuring. "Locking the barn door after the horse has escaped" comes to mind.
See Part 2
Rick Stanley
Constitutional Activist
Phone: 303-329-0481
E-mail: rick@stanley2002.org
We the People Scoop 02/19/05 ** Special Edition **
==================================================
=======
WE THE PEOPLE SCOOP - TO EXPOSE! **
** Visit the website: http://www.stanley2002.org **
** Like the Scoop? Forward it to everyone you know! **
==================================================
=======
MEDIA RELEASE: They've Got Your Number (and More)
http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north345.html
They've Got Your Number (and More)
by <mailto:gary@kbot.com>Gary North
by Gary North
A potential disaster has taken place. It has received virtually no
attention. Only MSNBC has reported it. There is almost no discussion of it on the web. Had a specialist in communications issues not contacted me, I would not have heard about it.
You have probably not heard of ChoicePoint. Over the last twenty years, ChoicePoint has compiled a private data base on Americans that dwarfs anything the I.R.S. has. Unlike the I.R.S., ChoicePoint has a comprehensive computer system that is state of the art. The information covers name, address, Social Security, transactions, and much, much more.
Last week, the company notified over 30,000 people in California that it has experienced a breach in security. Hardly any of these people had ever heard of ChoicePoint.
But they are in bed with ChoicePoint, like it or not.
So are you. Here's why:
ChoicePoint maintains a dossier on virtually every American consumer, according to Daniel J. Solove, George Washington University professor and author of http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/A...62/lewrockwell/>The Digital
Person.
The Atlanta-based company says it has 10 billion records on individuals and businesses, and sells data to 40 percent of the nation's top 1,000 companies. It also has contracts with 35 government agencies, including several law enforcement agencies.
So, what exactly has happened? The company is not quite sure. Neither is the government.
Criminals posing as legitimate businesses have accessed critical personal data stored by ChoicePoint Inc., a firm that maintains databases of background information on virtually every U.S. citizen, MSNBC.com has learned.
The incident involves a wide swath of consumer data, including names, addresses, Social Security numbers, credit reports and other information. ChoicePoint aggregates and sells such personal information to government agencies and private companies.
This information caught my attention. It apparently has not caught the attention of the major news media. For them, it's a non-story, in part because the company so far has successfully downplayed it.
While the criminals had access to ChoicePoint data, it's not clear what, if any, information was stolen, said Chuck Jones, another ChoicePoint spokesman. . . .
Last week, the company notified between 30,000 and 35,000 consumers in California that their personal data may have been accessed by "unauthorized third parties," according to ChoicePoint spokesman James Lee . . .
The words "may have been accessed" are not reassuring to me. I'm in the database. Now I wonder who has access to it.
Lee said law enforcement officials have so far advised the firm that only Californians need to be notified.
Why California? Because only California requires by law that data-gathering companies notify its citizens when a breach of security takes place. So, unless you live in California, you will not be notified.
What does it all mean? We aren't sure yet. This much we know: the concerns that you have had about providing your Social Security number to strangers are now on the front burner. You have worried that someone might pass on this information to criminals, who would use this information to penetrate your accounts and start spending your money. It looks as though thieves got this information wholesale: a volume discount operation of historic proportions.
Subsequent research by ChoicePoint revealed that about 50 fake companies had been set up and then registered with ChoicePoint to access consumer data.
California consumers who received warning letters from the firm last week were "in some way connected to searches" conducted by those fake accounts, Lee said.
NO HEADLINES
When did this happen? Last October. According to ChoicePoint, there was no announcement because law authorities prohibited it.
The incident was discovered in October, when ChoicePoint was contacted by a law enforcement agency investigating an identity theft crime. In that incident, suspects had posed as a ChoicePoint client to gain access to the firm's rich consumer databases . . .
The firm was only given clearance by law enforcement officials to disclose the incident two weeks ago, Lee said.
The letters were sent as a precaution, he said.
A precaution? For what? For whom? If it's a precaution for up to 35,000 Californians, then what about you? What about me? I don't live in a "precautionary" state.
The letter urges consumers to check their credit reports for suspicious activity.
"We believe that several individuals, posing as legitimate business customers, recently committed fraud by claiming to have a lawful purpose for accessing information about individuals," it reads. "You should continue to check your credit reports frequently for the next year."
Next year? Next decade!
I think of Wilford Brimley's line in
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...25/lewrockwell/>Absence
of Malice. His character was investigating a breach of security in a
Federal prosecutor's office. The local newspaper had picked up story after story. The bureaucrat in charge of the office admitted to a leak. Brimley, playing the ultimate good old boy Southern lawyer, responded:
A leak? You call what's going on here a leak? Boy, the last time we had a leak like this, Noah built himself a boat.
The article went on to say that nothing much is being said by ChoicePoint.
The two-page letter offers details on how to spot fraud, but no additional information about the incident, or what information may have actually been stolen.
"ChoicePoint has apologized for any inconvenience this incident may cause," said ChoicePoint spokesman Chuck Jones. "But ChoicePoint has no way of knowing whether anyone's personal information actually has been accessed," or used to commit identity theft, he added.
Here is what is arguably the largest data base company on earth.
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/ID/6969799>It can't say what has or has not been breached. It is now four months after the breach took place.
Privacy consultant Larry Ponemon, who operates the Ponemon Institute, said he was surprised criminals were able to pose as ChoicePoint clients.
"What really concerns me is when low-tech methods are used to gain access, than you really have problems," said. "Obviously this is very surprising, given that they are in the data business."
Jones said ChoicePoint had adjusted its procedures to "help protect against a repeat" of the incident.
Somehow, this is not reassuring. "Locking the barn door after the horse has escaped" comes to mind.
See Part 2