The
news has been abuzz recently with stories about a Web site that has posted sensitive
personal information on a variety of politicians and celebrities. If these
people can’t keep their personal information private and out of the hands of
potential identity thieves, no one can. The fact that you are not famous might
make it less likely that anyone will try to steal your identity, but you might
be surprised how easy it can be for identity thieves to get information about
you that they shouldn’t have.
Investigators
say the offending Web site could very likely be Russian, but that doesn’t mean
overseas threats are the only ones we need to be concerned about. Even
legitimate companies and organizations right here in the U.S. may put our
personal information at risk.
Google,
for instance, recently settled with Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway,
along with 37 other states and the District of Columbia, over privacy concerns
about its Street View program. Not only did specially equipped vehicles take
pictures of residences nationwide between 2008 and 2010, they also collected
information from unsecured WiFi networks at homes and businesses along the way.
Your own family’s personal information could have been put at risk. Google’s
practices may have improved, but plenty of other businesses want your
information. Personal information about you may even be publically available on
the Internet without your knowledge.
Individuals
and families can only do so much to protect their personal information.
Ultimately, the public must let politicians know they need help defending
themselves from identity thieves and others who want too much information.
READERS,
what do you think?
What
can you do to better protect your personal information? And what should the
government and businesses do to help?
References:
Office
of the Attorney General, Commonwealth of Kentucky. (2013, March 12). Attorney
General Conway Announces $7 Million Multistate Settlement with Google over
Street View WiFi Data Capture. Retrieved from http://migration.kentucky.gov/newsroom/ag/googlewifi.htm.
Schmidt,
M. S., & Perlroth, N. (2013, March 12). Web Site Investigated for Posting
Private Data. New York Times.
Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/13/us/personal-data-on-well-known-people-is-posted.html.