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"Sylvain" wrote in message
... I'd be interested in reading that. found it! :-) California law doesn't have the authority to override the federal prohibition against use of the social security number. They can put whatever they want into the California Vehicle Code. If federal law prohibits their use of the SS number, it is prohibited, and the California law is in violation of federal law. Pete |
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message
... [...] They can put whatever they want into the California Vehicle Code. If federal law prohibits their use of the SS number, it is prohibited, and the California law is in violation of federal law. However, the premise that "federal law prohibits their use of the SS number" is false (as I've now learned). Here's the SSA FAQ on the question: http://makeashorterlink.com/?J3BB42B6C (long version: http://ssa-custhelp.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/...php?p_faqid=78) Some quotes: The Privacy Act regulates the use of SSNs by government agencies. When a Federal, State, or local government agency asks an individual to disclose his or her Social Security number, the Privacy Act requires the agency to inform the person of the following: the statutory or other authority for requesting the information; whether disclosure is mandatory or voluntary; what uses will be made of the information; and the consequences, if any, of failure to provide the information. And, If a business or other enterprise asks you for your SSN, you can refuse to give it. However, that may mean doing without the purchase or service for which your number was requested. IMHO the latter quote is a bit of a "duh". Other than the usual contractual obligations, I'm not aware of any law that gives a private business the authority to compel me to do something. Apparently, federal law does *not* prohibit businesses from asking for and using a social security number as a requirement for doing business with them. Basically, the way I read this, pretty much anyone can ask for and use your social security number, and governments can impose a legal obligation requiring you to divulge it. "Privacy Act". Right. Pete |
#3
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Peter Duniho wrote:
"Privacy Act". Right. at least California came up with the Civil Code Section 1798.85 -- gosh, why do I manage to memorize things like that, but can forget where I parked my car? -- which brings a bit of sanity in the whole thing (in short -- probably inaccurate summary, but that's the gist of it as I remember it -- it prevents whoever has your SSN# from being as outwardly careless and reckless with it as they once were, e.g., using it in correspondence, on membership/id cards, etc., not much about how they store and protect the info though... --Sylvain |
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