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LifeLock Worries About Employee’s Personal Data, Asks New Times to Alter Published Police Report

Posted on May 26, 2010 by Dissent

Ray Stern reports:

Lame!

LifeLock, the so-called identity-theft “protection” company based in Tempe we wrote about last week, called us in a tizzy yesterday — worried about the accidental publication of one its employees’ personal data.

This is the type of situation LifeLock would never put in a press release, but we’re more than happy to relate the ironic tale. It seems to be yet another example of the Tempe company’s ineffective protection service.

Read more on Phoenix New Times.

Hat-tip, Computerworld


Related:

  • LifeLock Will Pay $12 Million to Settle Charges by the FTC and 35 States That Identity Theft Prevention and Data Security Claims Were False
  • FTC Takes Action Against LifeLock for Alleged Violations of 2010 Order
  • "I'm Not Pro-Russia and I'm Not a Terrorist!" —- InfraGard and Airbus Hacker “USDoD” Unveils His New Campaigns
  • LifeLock to Pay $100 Million to Consumers to Settle FTC Charges it Violated 2010 Order (Updated)
  • The Secret IRS Files: Trove of Never-Before-Seen Records Reveal How the Wealthiest Avoid Income Tax
Category: Breach IncidentsBusiness SectorExposureU.S.

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