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June 24, 2005 4:16 PM PDT

ChoicePoint overhaul falls behind

  • 2 comments
ChoicePoint, the data broker that leaked the personal information of 145,000 Americans, has gone off schedule in its efforts to prevent such a breach happening again.

In early March, the company announced it would exit some parts of the personal data business and that it would sell information only in situations where specific criteria are met. The transition would be "substantially completed" within 90 days, ChoicePoint said at the time. That schedule would mean the effort would be done about early June.

On Friday, ChoicePoint spokeswoman Kristen McCaughan said the Alpharetta, Ga.-based data broker has not yet completed the changes. "It is ongoing," she said. McCaughan could not say when ChoicePoint expects to be able to announce that it has completed the process. "I don't think it is going to be anytime in the near future," she said.

The announcement of the overhaul in March came a month after ChoicePoint had revealed that scam artists had gotten access to personal data on tens of thousands of Americans, resulting in at least 750 cases of identity theft. The scandal has prompted calls for new legislation to protect consumers' privacy rights.

As part of the changes, ChoicePoint has said it will no longer sell data to private investigators, debt collectors or businesses such as check-cashing outfits, unless they are associated with an accredited bank. Additionally, ChoicePoint plans to mask sensitive information such as Social Security numbers in its reports.

ChoicePoint also said in March that it would only provide data in three general situations: to support consumer-driven transactions, such as those with insurers or employers, or to provide consumers access to their own data; to provide authentication or fraud-prevention tools; or to assist justice agencies.

One change the company has made, in accordance with federal law, is that consumers can now get a free annual "public records" report. The report can be requested on the company's ChoiceTrust consumer Web site.

The changes are expected to cost ChoicePoint between $15 million and $20 million in sales during 2005 and to reduce earnings per share by 10 cents to 12 cents, the company said in March.

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Access by Justice agencies
by Chrisz63 June 25, 2005 10:29 AM PDT
Choicepoint sells access to data for "justice agencies." Why are justice agencies allowed to buy access to anyone's personal data without a warrant?
Reply to this comment
Infiltration
by Stating June 26, 2005 12:43 AM PDT
I think one can safely assume that any and all companies of this nature have been infiltrated by para-governmental agency operatives. If you listen to interviews from people like Kevin Mitnick, you will learn that things like phone taps are put on people all the time without a court order, and the taps are left on for a very long time. In some cases, after they have learned useful info, they retroactively get a court order for the tap. Yeah, the Constitution is pretty much out the window and has been for a long time. Freedom is just an illusion.
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