SELECT noprivacy FROM census, socialsecurity, irs
"The Congressional Budget Office, with the surprising help of some Congressional Republicans, is angling to get its hands on Census Bureau files," reports the
New York Times today
(free reg. req.). Here's the interesting thing. A staffer for Rep. Dan Miller (R-Fla.) told the NYT that there is no problem with doing a little cross-correlating of your census, Social Security, and IRS files: "The Census Bureau is the government, and Congress is the government." Last April, that same Dan Miller was
blaming the Clinton adminstration
for making the American people distrust their government through mishandling of sensitive files.
Aren't your IRS and Social Security files cross-corellated already?? I mean, they're both owned by the Federal Government, and you do put your social security number on your tax forms...
"Beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he deems himself your master."
Can we at least get the same information and correlations for all officers of the government posted online? After all, if they think it's fine to correlate and snoop on us, it must be okay for use to correlate and snoop on them.
Or they could have kept their promise not to hand out the census data. Yeah. Right.
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Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
I'm not... The government does at it sees fit with little to no reaction from the populace, becuase the sheep out there think that their elected representatives know best.
But I'm not bitter...
I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
I felt it would be beneficial for my wife and kid to have more Chinese-language services in our neighborhood, so I told the Census there were five guys from Mainland China living in my basement.
Now I'm really in trouble.
That's it. Next census, I'm filling out name, age, and gender, and marking all the rest "refuse to answer". I will not sit idly by while the government uses this information against its own citizens.
TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
They have the method, and they have the opportunity...
The thing to look for in this "sudden" change of face is his motive. Whom was he trying to please when he tried to get the people to distrust the government? And now who his paying his campaign funds to get him to get us to trust the same government?
Folks, the members of Congress don't give a rat's ass one way or the other. You need to look for who is calling their shots and paying their bills if you want to see the true specific motives.
You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
great, so now the government is going to check up on you. they know who you are, where you live, who lives with you, if you filed your taxes correctly, whow many tv's you own, how far you drive to work. geez...
have you seen some of the questions on the long form? christ i wouldnt want people to be able to attribute a lot of those answers back to me, and thats exactly what they will be able to do if they cross reference all those documents.
maybe the government should do what they are supposed to do with a census, and just count people, and not try to profile everyone and everything. imagine if they fed your long form census answers through "profiling" device such as the one being pushed by the FBI for schools.
kids... big brother is watching.
tagline
... hi bingo
Okay... I'll admit that I don't particularly like the idea of the IRS, Census, and Social Security but is there really any compelling reason why they shouldn't, besides the paranoid (justifiable or otherwise) excuse of 'They'll have too much information'.
Theoretically it would allow them to cross check your Tax forms to try to catch people who may not report income (but are receiving Social Security benifits from it), (or are perhaps reporting 15 children to the IRS but only 4 on the Census form).
Anything has the potential for abuse, but decrying any utilizing of the data for fear of abuse is obtuse. I think its an interesting idea, and while I don't like the idea of profiling people, considering how much you can find out about someone on their Credit Report, I don't see why the government as a whole should be prevented from puting this sort of information together. Now... tell me that they are going to start merging in FBI files, DMV records and whatnot into a 'Citizen Registration Database' and I might get worried... but then again... the FBI already does that.
This space for rent. All reasonable inquiries will be entertained at proprietors discretion.
This is exactly the kind of thing that will make people not want to fill out the form every decade. Every ten years, they beg and plead for us to fill these things out. They promise confidiality. They screen the census takers. Will they never learn?
No wonder Joseph left town when they took the census 2000 years ago. Maybe he was on to something.
free reg. req
The other (non-reg) NYT link
1Alpha7
Live to be Moderated
While I believe that the NYT has a right to require registration to read their articles, there are times like now when it's funny.
We have to provide personal demographic data to read an article about how the government wants to misuse our personal demographic data.
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Forward, retransmit, or republish anything I say here. Just don't misquote me.
that i didn't fill out my census forms.
"I don't need a compass to tell me which way the wind shines." - Mr. Furious, Mystery Men
Bruce
Bruce Perens.
It seems to me as though the government is attempting to modify its own "privacy policy" with regard to the Census Bureau's data, and then use the already-collected information (from when the old (current) privacy policy was/is in force) for new uses, which would clearly have not been expected, based upon the privacy policy citizens were aware of at the time they were filling out these surveys and providing their personal information.
It seems to me that, if it's possible to sue web sites and corporations for such abuses of the public trust, we should be able to also sue the government for such. Not that I expect it likely to happen, given that the two major parties are both intent on becoming Big Brother.
I suppose all we can do is engage in an active campaign of disinformation if/when we're asked to fill out these surveys. That, or move to a free country, if one existed.
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It's pretty pathetic when karma can drop when you do nothing
"The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." --H.L. Mencken
David Brin. The Transparent Society.
What information about me are they going to find out? How many doors I have in my house? They already know where the back door is and have been using it for years.
Was there a privacy notice on the census form? I don't remember seeing one....
DrLunch.com The site that tells you what's for lunch!
Personally I don't see how this li'l drone plans to get his hands on the raw Census data - he's talking out his ass. There have been many assurances, many committments on this & I don't imagine they'll get broken, particularly in an election season.
I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
Of course, if you were lying on your Census form, or on your tax return, then you might have reason to be worried...
Speaking of lying, what about all the promises that Census information was confidential? Are they allowed to simply ignore promises when it's convienent.
A lot of people were really pissed off when etoys.com went under and sold their contact list despite promises to the contrary. Why should the government not have to face such scrutiny?
The fact is if you promise to keep information confidential you should keep it confidential, not change your mind whenever it's convienent.
I got the census long form and was horrified at that they expected me to tell them. So I ignored it. After the third visit from the census person, I took pity on her and called the number listed on the card she left. I told her I was the brother of the man living there, and there was no one in residence, my brother being overseas. That was the end of it as far as they were concerned. If they just wanted to count me, then that would be one thing, but when they want to know how many toilets I have, am I Hispanic (and am I SURE I'm not Hispanic?), how much I earn, blah blah blah, they've gone over the line. This story just reinforces the wisdom of that decision. It's gotten so that if the government tells me one thing, my first inclination is to believe the exact opposite. And they wonder why.
Well, seems to me you should have written:
UPDATE Privacy P
SET public_good = 'N',
GOP = 'Y',
liars = 'Y',
privacy_rights = 'Sold to Highest Bidder'
FROM Census C
WHERE C.personal_record = P.personal_record
AND C.legal = 'N'
AND P.voting_this_election IS NOT NULL
--- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
Why would anyone be surprised by / paranoid about this? Information, even census information, wants to be free.
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share and enjoy
Human Resources Canada tried to pull a fast one like that a while ago. The fit hit the shan (breach of privacy) and they had to back off and dismantle it. DROP DATABASE LLFF
This file was a collation of Employment, Unemployment, Taxation and Customs files on Canadian Citizens. One particularly interesting usage was to XREF people returning from vacation with unemployment records. So that if you were on EI and took a week to Aruba, they'd mark you as ineligible and fine you for the extra weeks paid out.
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Vote Inanimate Carbon Rod in 2000
Since he hadn't filled out the form he received, we filled it out and required that all residents in his house have more than two racial subgroups.
Actually, I seem to recall that since we're typical Americans, it wasn't hard to do that and tell the truth at the same time, but this is in Sourthern California (Santa Barbara CA).
So, is there a penalty if you live in two houses and you fill out the census forms twice?
--- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
Yet another reason to vote Libertarian:
With no IRS and no extensive Census records, there's nothing to correlate.
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Or write Rep. Miller. Miller's site cleverly does not include his email address, but according to this site turned up by Google , Miller's email is miller13@mail.house.gov. Seems plausible, since he represents the 13th district in Florida. It won't be his personal email address, however. Ask him or his flacks to explain the apparent inconsistency in his two positions, as indicated by the links in the header. Note that http://www.house.gov/danmiller/census/faq.htm , the official FAQ of the Census Subcommittee, hosted by Miller's office, encourages people to divulge all the requested information to the Census, and states the following to assuage their privacy concerns:
If you live in his District, write your local paper. Get them to ask him to explain the apparent inconsistency in his public statements. He's up for reelection. Make it an issue if you are a constituent.
You only have yourself to blame for your cynicism and inaction. Bitching on Slashdot won't change the world. At least not in politics. Slashdot is useful to let you know what's going on, but bitching here won't do much of anything except give you some catharsis.
How do you think they knew who was who?
Admittedly they used several methods, but one was Census data, given quite willingly at that time by the Census Bureau...
Herb
Herb
Again, feel free to sentence me to death if my questions annoy you. I'll come back in 5 minutes anyway. -Sythi
When the census guy finally got around to us, we had to sit him down and pour him a drink. The short form isn't all that short if you've got 12 people living in your house, only two of them are home, and you've got to guess at peoples birth dates, full names, etc.
Maybe they'll connect my census records with my asbestos testing results, housing inspections, fire inspections, police records, and strong sugestions to the IRS criminal investigation about my slumlord. At that point Carole's abuse of the SkunkHouse residents will probably fall under RICO.
Wait... you mean you still haven't joined the ACLU?
what about all the promises that Census information was confidential? Are they allowed to simply ignore promises when it's convienent
It is still confidential. No-one outside the government is going to see it. You obviously missed the point of my analogy with having two transactions with Amazon. The individual transactions are confidential, and the correlation between the two is confidential. So long as none of the information leaves the organization, no breach of promise or privacy has occurred.
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E_NOSIG
Because congress won't let them. Apparently the Census folks asked Congress if they could use statistical sampling to improve their accuracy and Congress said no. Apparently older richer people are more likely to fill out Census forms, which determines how funding is distributed. With the current system, richer neighborhoods tend to recieve more money proportionally than poorer neighborhoods. Some well connected people apparently didn't want to give that up.
Personally I can't really see the justification behind forcing everyone to fill out these forms anymore.
I read the internet for the articles.
IRS shares data with lots of agencies, including SSA (to confirm FICA withholding, forward Self-Employment tax payments, etc.), Dept of Education (to confirm eligibility for Student Financial Aid), and others.
That I know of, SSA does NOT share individual data with anyone, except death records, which they will share with anyone (not just government agencies). In some cases, SSA will take another agencies data, do a match for them, and then provide 'cleansed' results. That might be a good alternative for the curent situation, have Census do the match and then provide the results in 'cleansed' data.
Most agencies provide data TO Census, for example, they get a HUGE data dump from the Post Office of every mailing address in the country, but Census does not share INDIVIDUAL data with ANYONE.
Work for Change & GET PAID!
The Census Bureau is only allowed to release information in aggregate.
I believe the intent is to get the most accurate information possible by promising confidentiality, similar to drug surveys. Only in this case, it's not only a promise but a law.
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"Its" citizens? "ITS" citizens??? Fuck you. I don't belong to the government, the government belongs to me.
But if you must know, governments should not be able to track "its" citizens because of the history of government abuses. While the US decried to horrors of Nazi Germany rounding up the Jews, the US rounded up Japanese... with information from the Census.
Hitler didn't have anything like the detailed information on "his" citizens that the US has today. The Nazis kept records of suspected Jews in shoeboxes.
If a neo-fascist came to power in the US and decided to implement a final solution, having a nice cross referenced database like this would be invaluable.
You can't say "it can't happen here" when it already did once before.
-- Don't Tase me, bro!
and the whole point of the census is to figure out how much the govt. has to spend on you...
BZZZT! And thank you for playing! Here's your lovely partying gift.
The purpose of the census, per the US Constitution is the apportionment of House of Representatives. Period. Congratulations, Lord Omlette, you bought the government's story - hook, line, and sinker.
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
The point is that nobody with any influence will stand up and stop this from happening. The politicians will get on tv and lie through their teeth to the people of this country about how this isn't really a bad thing. Nobody will know what's going on, and therefore they won't get sufficiently pissed off to put a stop to it.
I'll be writing more letters to my congresscritters about this. They're idiots apparently, given their responses to my last round of letters. (My representative took my support for the new Music Owners' Listening Rights Act as support for Napster, which I only mentioned briefly in passing. Aaargh!) They're idiots, but I don't know what else I can do right now to fight this sort of thing.
It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
Well, you may be able to sue the government for violation of an implied contract. This would be a good exercise for the EFF...
sulli
RTFJ.
Actually, for the most part, this is already the case. Congressional and executive salaries, including non-government salaries, are all publicly declared and reported. You can request all this stuff-- it is public record, and occasionally published in the newspapers if it has some shred of juiciness to it.
Campaign contributors are the same way. Try to donate five bucks to a candidate-- you'll have to enter personal information to allow them to comply with campaign finance laws-- and much is published by the Federal Elections Commission.
Anyway, the whole point of the Census-- the reason it is in the constitution-- is to give government agencies, especially Congress, the information they need to determine the effects of different public policies. For instance, if the Congressional Budget Office wants to determine what the effects of a tax increase will be-- who it will hit and by how much, and what the effects on revenue will be, they need that information. The Census makes government (theoretically) more science and less guesswork. There's still plenty of opinion to politics, but solid numbers helps people.
That's one reason why libertarians and conservatives don't like how huge government has become. It has touched so many areas of our personal lives that it has to collect invasive information about us. Free healthcare for everyone? Well, we need to know if you qualify. Diane Feinstein, for instance, supported a plan to have a national ID card/database. The plan was rescinded when Congress changed parties.
You can't support a bigger government (as Nader, Gore and Feinstein do) without supporting measures to give government the authority to gather the personal information it needs to support a larger government.
The law that protects Census data is Title 13.
You can read about it on the Census Policy page: (at the bottom of the page)
http://www.census.gov/main/www/poli cie s.html
Or on congresses 'code' page: http://uscode.house.gov/title_13.htm Here's the meat:
(a) Neither the Secretary, nor any other officer or employee of the Department of Commerce or bureau or agency thereof, or local government census liaison, may, except as provided in section 8 or 16 or chapter 10 of this title or section 210 of the Departments of Commerce, Justice, and State, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1998 or section 2(f) of the Census of Agriculture Act of 1997 -
(1) use the information furnished under the provisions of this title for any purpose other than the statistical purposes for which it is supplied; or
(2) make any publication whereby the data furnished by any particular establishment or individual under this title can be identified; or
(3) permit anyone other than the sworn officers and employees of the Department or bureau or agency thereof to examine the individual reports.
"I don't know half of you half as well as I should like, and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve."
No, the reason they don't use sampling is because it is more vulnerable to political motivation. The Constitution demands an 'enumeration'. Not a guess-- even a solid one. An actual count is tougher, but less vulnerable to political manipulation-- there are long lines of clever stat people ready to skew the results the 'right way'. Look at the numbers both our candidates spout on their economic plans.
You'd have to change the Constitution to change the Census policy.
Both run ancient COBOL systems for the most part.
I find that if I make typo in a tax return- mainly forgeting a 1099- the state system catches them faster than federal, if the federal catches them at all.
If the data is usable- not a given in crude federal computer systems- someone will figure out a justification for using it.
Some states are pretty bad- for example CA. The most reliable and comprehensive database is the drivers registration database. That should be used for tracking driver licenses, car registrations, vehicle taxes, and driving violations. But CA attaches all kinds of non-driving stuff to it- because the database is relatively decent. The DMV is used for tracking rogue child support, jury duty, identification cards, immigration eligibilty, parts sold to credit agencies, marketers, plus other things. All this non-driving stuff slows down the over all computer & human system.
Its only a matter of time before the feds get their act together and do similar data mining abuses.
So much for the Clinton-haters who say that he never did anything good for the country.
/.
/. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
The reason for these kinds of protections is that the government needs accurate statistical data on what is going on in the country to make policy decisions. Laying open US Census information would only result in non-response. The net result would only be that the government would have much less accurate statistical data.
If the CBO, or some other government office, wants to correlate data, they can submit IRS, INS, and other data to the Census Bureau, the Census Bureau can do the correlation, and provide aggregate statistical results back to other government agencies. If the US Census Bureau continues to take privacy as seriously as they have in the past, this should not raise significant privacy concerns.
If Dan Miller doesn't understand the need for safeguarding the ability of the US government to collect accurate statistical data, and the profoundly negative effect tampering with the current privacy guarantees of the US Census would have on that ability, he should probably not be on the congressional census committee.
When I was working for them, I was assured time and again that no information I collected would be given out in any way that could ever, under any circumstance, identify any individual. We were told that anyone working for the Census Bureau who gave out any information we collected could be fined thousands of dollars and thrown in jail for several years.
We were told that all the information beyond the "number of people who live here" questions were used for statistical purposes - finding out the average income of households in certain areas, finding out how long most people took to drive to work, etc.
Many people I met going door to door would never have given me the information they did if I hadn't assured them that the law stated that nobody from outside the Census Bureau would get any of this information. I would hate to find out now that although I was telling the truth at the time, I could now, retroactively, be made to have been lying to them.
One interesting thing about it, though, is that part of the procedure of the job was to give everyone I talked to a notice telling them that everything they told me was completely confidential, and informing them of their rights in the matter.
My question about the legality of this would be whether the Census Bureau, by ensuring people of that right through the notices I handed them before asking any questions, had entered into a contract of sorts? Or, since many people gave the information only because they were told it was confidential, would it constitute fraud?
In any case, if this change in law goes through, it will most probably destroy the census - the only reason 90% of the people I talked to told me anything was because they beleived the information was confidential. Take that beleif away, and I doubt many will give anything beyond name, rank, and seriel number.
I understand perfectly. The explict promise was that NOBODY including other parts of the government would see my answers. Not the INS, not the IRS, not the FBI, not anybody except for the bean counters and statisticians in the Census Bureau who wouldn't release any of the information except in a statistical and anonymous sense.
Nope, just you. I mean, come on, I thought everyone knew that -- what do they teach you at school there? =^) <-- note
One-click govt!
All your information will be stored in a cookie somewhere, all correlated, cross-referenced, and catalogued, so that when they need to do something, all they have to do is load your profile, and... click.
Of course, I'm not creative to actually list out what they would do to use or abuse this info. Of course, it's also late, and I'm not feeling particularly paranoid or creative, either...
The nick is a joke! Really!
GPL Deconstructed
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