Experian, Ford, and Identity Theft
corebreech writes "The mighty New York Times (I think they might want you to register) is reporting that hackers posing as Ford employees have managed to pilfer some 13,000 credit reports (Quality is Job 1.) Supposedly the info isn't restricted to merely credit card numbers, but rather includes such delectable delights as address, SSN, bank account info and creditworthiness. Glad I take the subway." The original story was from the Boston Globe.
In the land of the great lawsuit, which is America at the turn of the millenium, I'd be more than happy to have Ford leak my info. In a flash I'd have a family member sell of my identity to someone (or have a good friend assume my identity) and rock my credit record for all it's worth.
Then I'd just sue Ford for lossing my info. They've already admited to doing it, so there's pretty much no burden of proof. Corporate neglegence should be pretty easy to prove.
That sound you hear is lawyers sharpening their claws.
Read the article again. They didn't just steal the personal financial information of Ford owners.
They just pretended to be Ford so that they could access the credit reports of thousands of people. Subway-riders included.
These credit bureaus have too much centralized data on citizens. They are a one stop shop for crooks, be they crackers or whatever.
Curb CO2 emissions: Kill yourself today!
Mother's maiden names are similarly public records. In practice they have been harder to track down in the past, but wiht various records including those of the Mormon church coming on-line that information is not fully accessible as well. See first paragraph for implications.
sPh