ChoicePoint Promises To Write 'Personal Information Should Be Protected' 500,000 Times, Promises Not To Do It Again
from the pointless dept
ChoicePoint had already been hit with $15 million in fines and damages for, what was at the time, the largest credit-card data leak ever (though it lost that title to TJX earlier this year). But 44 states have gotten in on the action, hitting the company with a staggering $500,000 more and an agreement that it will put better security in place. ChoicePoint says it has reformed its ways and is working to solve its problems, but forgive us for being skeptical -- particularly when the company seems to have another big problem, in the form of incorrect data. The new deal with the states says that ChoicePoint will extend the same, supposedly better level of protection to all its consumer records, instead of just those covered by the Fair Credit Reporting Act, as required by the FTC settlement, and ChoicePoint says it will more stringently check out new customers for its data. A ChoicePoint exec brags that the company "has become a model of privacy protection" since the breach -- but if it's so concerned about consumer privacy, why did it take these further steps only as part of a settlement with the attorney generals, and not on its own? Never mind the fact that it apparently only decided security was important after a massive breach. It's really hard to believe that ChoicePoint, or indeed any other company in a similar situation, has any interest in proactively improving its security, since there's little financial incentive for them to do so. Instead, they can just leak data, pay the miniscule fines, make some changes, issue a press release, and move on.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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correction
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And FYI, none of that was intended as sarcasm.
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*seething rage*
Rage, Rage, Rage...
*mumbling*
'One of these days were going to have a real necktie party !'
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Hear, hear
Open Source is superior and more secure for exactly this reason. Pop quiz: When's the last time *you* read any Open Source? Do you think that in the source archive, there's a plain text file called "FOR SECURITY PERSONNEL ONLY" that outlines all of the known vulnerabilities?
You're either an idiot, a corporate shill, or both, AC. That little FUD turd dried up back in the 90s. You're an embarrassment to whomever's paying you.
Bonus question: When was the last time you heard of an Open Source security hole? If you actually did, how long before it was closed? Now compare/contrast to Microsoft's track record.
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Re: Hear, hear
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Re: Hear, hear
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