Database
The Database nation. Whats databases are being built? and how are they doing it?

 


















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  Tuesday, October 31, 2006


Several leading banks may be facing unlimited fines over allegations that they dumped confidential customer account details in bin bags on streets.

The information watchdog, Richard Thomas, told the Times that he had received "highly disturbing evidence".

He is investigating alleged lapses by the Royal Bank of Scotland, Halifax, HSBC, Natwest and Post Office, it said.

The British Bankers Association said it was normal practice to dispose of confidential information securely.


12:44:13 PM    

UK Banks Dump Credentials in Bin Bags. Plutonite writes "BBC news is reporting that several UK banks face 'unlimited fines' for careless handling of sensitive client information. This apparently came after investigators found account details while rummaging through the trash outside the banks involved. In this age of online banking and related security problems, and in light of this scandal, where can we expect to find the greatest threat of ID theft?" [Slashdot: Your Rights Online]
12:37:06 PM    

Airline Passenger Profiling for Profit.

Bruce Schneier discusses an article (subscription required) about a start-up company called Jetera, who plans to combine people[base ']s flight data with their financial & credit data in order to create in-flight personalization as well as pre- and post-flight mailings and other personalized services:

Jetera would start with an airline[base ']s information on individual passengers on board a given flight, drawing the name, address, credit card number and loyalty club status from reservations data. Through a process, for which it seeks a patent, the company would match the passenger[base ']s identification data with the mountains of information about him or her available at one of the mammoth credit bureaus, which maintain separately managed marketing as well as credit information. Jetera would tap into the marketing side, showing consumer demographics, purchases, interests, attitudes and the like.Jetera[base ']s data manipulation would shape the entertainment made available to each passenger during a flight. The passenger who subscribes to a do-it-yourself magazine might be offered a video on woodworking. Catalog purchase records would boost some offerings and downplay others. Sports fans, known through their subscriptions, credit card ticket-buying or booster club memberships, would get [base "]The Natural[per thou] instead of [base "]Pretty Woman.[per thou]

Privacy is (sort of) dealt with at the end of the article:

Jetera sees two legal issues regarding privacy and resolves both in its favor. Nothing Jetera intends to do would violate federal law or airline privacy policies as expressed on their websites. In terms of customer perceptions, Jetera doesn[base ']t intend to abuse anyone[base ']s privacy and will have an [base "]opt-out[per thou] opportunity at the point where passengers make inflight entertainment choices.If an airline wants an opt-out feature at some other point in the process, Jetera will work to provide one, McChesney says. Privacy and customer service will be an issue for each airline, and Jetera will adapt specifically to each.

Unbelievable.

[michaelzimmer.org]
11:34:43 AM    

Fingerprint the expats! FCO plans phase two biometric passport.

Cross-Channel loophole to close by 2010

Plans to add fingerprints to UK overseas passports are under way, despite the cost and complexity involved in gathering biometrics from UK citizens across the globe, a parliamentary answer revealed last week. Passports issued by the Foreign & Commonwealth Office are already "biometric", but only in the somewhat minimalist sense required by ICAO - the addition of fingerprints, however, would pull overseas UK residents into the National Identity Register net, closing off a prized but little-known escape route.

[The Register - Internet and Law: Digital Rights/Digital Wrongs]
11:06:31 AM    


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