Sunday, September 23, 2007

Privacy Is No Longer Guaranteed In The Digital Age

It's a story that seems to be repeated over and over.

I've received the letters from various companies advising that my or my wife's confidential information might have been released to third parties by mistake or by information theft. I bet there will come a time when everyone in America has had their private financial data inadvertently or intentionally released.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Citigroup's ABM AMRO Mortgage Group experienced a data leak recently when three spreadsheets containing over 5,000 social security numbers had been released.

It's time to move away from linking all financial records to people's social security numbers and instead require that financial institutions and other entities assign their own unique account numbers to customers. There's too much abuse of social security numbers for them to be the unique identifier of Americans. The debate over immigration and people working without employment authorization is just one example of how social security numbers have been abused.

It's also a good reminder to make sure to monitor your credit reports for any strange activity.

Placing a fraud alert with the major credit bureaus might also be a worthwhile endeavor, especially if one or more of your financial institutions has allowed your information out of its grasp.

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Sunday, September 9, 2007

Time For Porter County's 'No Growth' Pols To Go?

Steve Dalton over at Dalton's Briefs raises an interesting point.

Should the politicians in Porter County who fight against growth work to cut ever increasing property taxes now that the housing market is in a slump and property values are declining?

Since this is supposedly a market based property tax system I will expect to see massive cuts in government expenditures now too.


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