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Bank Goofs, and Judge Orders Gmail Account Nuked

An anonymous reader writes "The Rocky Mountain Bank, based in Wyoming, accidentally sent confidential financial information to the wrong Gmail account. When Google refused to identify the innocent account owner's information, citing its privacy policy, the bank filed in Federal court to have the account deactivated and the user's information revealed. District Judge James Ware granted the bank's request, with the result that the user has had his email access cut off without any wrongdoing or knowledge of why." The Reg's earlier story says, "Rocky Mountain Bank had asked to court to keep its suit under seal, hoping to avoid panic among its customers and a 'surge of inquiry.' But obviously, this wasn't successful."

7 of 594 comments (clear)

  1. Not a big surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    This decision was handed down by "Lying Judge" Ware. http://www.fa-ir.org/ai/judgeware.htm

    Talk about lifetime appointment gone haywire.

  2. Re:G-Mail? by FrozenGeek · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because the customer in question gave the bank a gmail account and said "send me information via this email address". Do you really think that your ISP-based email address is any better than gmail? If so, could I interest you in some waterfront property in Florida? Seriously. Unless the contents of the email is encrypted before it is sent, assume the whole fricken' world (with lasers,even) has access to it.

    --
    linquendum tondere
  3. Re:G-Mail? by SeaFox · · Score: 4, Informative

    Because the customer in question gave the bank a gmail account and said "send me information via this email address".

    The bank is worried about a panic amongest it's customer base. So they obviously sent informtaion on a large number of their customers, that tells you the person requesting the info was not a bank customer but another financial institution or a company they contract with of some sort. These type of recipients are going to have their own domain names and mail servers running on them, so there's no reason the email should have been addressed to a gmail account to start with if it dealt with official business.

  4. Re:G-Mail? by geekboy642 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually that's not what happened.

    On Aug. 12, the bank mistakenly sent names, addresses, social security numbers and loan information of more than 1,300 customers to a Gmail address.

    That's a lot of very confidential information. No bank customer has the need or right to see anybody else private information, let alone 1299 of them. And you are a moron for thinking this was about somebody's bank statement going to the wrong address.

    --
    Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
  5. Re:G-Mail? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If so, could I interest you in some waterfront property in Florida?

    Waterfront property in Florida is abundant. Florida is surrounded by water except on its northern state line, as well as being filled with lakes, marshes, and swampland. The saying is specifically "oceanfront property". The joke is, you say a landlocked state, such as... Arizona... and offer valuable "oceanfront property" there, because Arizona borders no ocean! Get it? It's a scam! You are supposed to know that Arizona has no ocean, just like you are supposed to know Florida is surround by water.

    Hey! There's even a song about the subject!

  6. Re:IMAP by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't know about you, but if a bank suddenly sent me 1,300 account's financial information, and then sent me an email telling me not to open it, I would be sending an email, calling, writing a letter, anything, because if something happens later to any of those accounts, I'm going to be one of the first people looked at.

    If it were me, I wouldn't be doing any of those things. That's because I'd've deleted the initial e-mail without reading it. An e-mail purporting to be from a bank I've never done business with is either a) an advertisement I'm not interested in, b) a phishing attempt I don't want to even look at let alone respond to, or c) information I don't need and don't want. Regardless of which it is, I've no need and no reason to even look at it, so into the bit bucket it goes. And why not? I'm under no obligation to read random correspondence someone else wants to send me, just like I'm under no obligation to read that wad of advertising flyers that show up in my mailbox every day.

  7. Re:Redirect the evil! by Dan541 · · Score: 3, Informative

    While I don't run my own mail server I do retain control over my email in that I can change my MX record to any provider I want. Unfortunately most people don't use their own domains. But if they did, even using google apps they would at least have some protection from this sort of abuse by having the option of moving providers.

    What would you do if you lost your email account? How many accounts and online services would you now be shut out of. It is basically identity theft, since the victim loses their online identity for it.

    This Judge should be barred, no question.

    --
    An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"