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John Theune wrote:
I'll addresss the last first. You really think your name is a good identifier? Have you looked at a phone book lately? only one guy in the rest of the USA with the same last name, who design fancy women shoes in New York :-) definitely nobody else with the same combination of first name and last name; ok, may be I am a bit of an exception here, but this is good enough for a business or bank, especially when coupled with an account number. but at some point there is need for crossover between the systems and having multiple numbers will increase the chance of a mismatch being made. why? what possible reason would your bank have to know your medical history? or history of phone calls? As far as SSN not being unique, the system was designed to have it be unique, if it broke down then fix it. it has broken down, and it has not been fixed. I just spent several minutes goggling on the "SSN Not Unique" and while it had many hits none of them said anything about the number being assigned to multiple people. as good as Google is, this is not the only source of info out there by the way. I think you need to remove your tinfoil hat here. Ah, the good ol' 'you are paranoid' argument; right next to the 'but, I have nothing to hide' argument. if you believe that all that's needed is additional regulations to protect you, then you are naive. May be, you might be lucky to live at a time when the current administration is indeed following its own rules, and respect due process, and all that. But information collected about you will outlive any administration; now may be you are right, may be I am paranoid and we will never live in a country where one's freedom of travel can be limited by secret lists which you cannot correct, where due process is no longer respected, where one can be imprisoned indefinitely and tortured without access to a lawyer or the evidence used against him, only based on bad intel collected via non transparent means, where the constitution becomes just a 'goddamn piece of paper', etc. yeah, it can be only a bad dream, my imagination is really running wild, cannot possibly happen here. Your bank has no legitimate reason to cross reference your account and your phone calls nor will they as they is no business reason for them to do so. then why make it easily available in the first place? oh, I get it; you can trust them, they are good people, why would they want to do you harm? nay, they'll never be tempted to sell your information to the best bidder, even when it becomes one of the hottest commodity in these days and age, why would they? it is not as if they would want to make money, just to look after your welfare. And in any case, you can trust the government to take care of it and look after your best interest should it ever be abused. Right. now, you are good at googling; find out what was the first large scale use of information technology -- beware, it predates electronic computers -- where cross referencing of seemingly innocuous personal information was used to its full potential (search for 'Edwin Black', should be mandatory reading to anyone taking up an IT course); Sorry for being so completely off the topic of this group, but this is a serious matter, where complacency eventually kills. --Sylvain |
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