Dr. Ken Pope writes on his mail list: An article with information relevant to patients’ informed consent, protection of human subjects, and the history of medical experimentation is scheduled for publication in the January, 2011, issue of Journal of Policy History. The article is “”Normal Exposure” and Inoculation Syphilis: A PHS ‘Tuskegee’ Doctor in Guatemala,…
Author: Dissent
Court: society's interest outweighs friars' privacy interests in psychiatric records
Psychiatric or mental health records are among the most sensitive records anywhere and courts have routinely stood firm in protecting confidentiality of those records. In a case involving the sexual molestation of children by friars, however, a court has held that the compelling social interests in protecting children outweighs the friars’ privacy interests in their…
FL: Ex-employee accused of hacking into loan company’s computers, stealing data
News-Press.com reports: A former employee of Home Lynx Home Loans on College Parkway is accused of hacking into the company’s computer system and stealing confidential customer information, potential customer lists and marketing material. The former employee, whose name was not available in the sheriff’s report, was terminated in June. The owner of the company told…
Article: DNA Theft: Recognizing the Crime of Nonconsensual Genetic Collection and Testing
Elizabeth E. Joh of the U.C. Davis has an article in a forthcoming issue of the Boston University Law Review (Vol. 91, 2011). Here’s the abstract: The fact that you leave genetic information behind on the discarded tissues, used coffee cups, and smoked cigarettes everywhere you go is generally of little consequence. The trouble arises…
Zeus Trojan bust reveals sophisticated ‘money mules’ operation in U.S.
Jaikumar Vijayan provides some interesting details on yesterday’s indictments over on Computerworld. Jai reports: All of the individuals charged in the U.S. so far are from Russia and East European countries and were either money mules who helped transfer stolen money out of the U.S., or individuals who managed or recruited them. Most of those charged…
Man linked to stolen bank data found dead in Swiss prison
Reuters is reporting: A man held in connection with client data stolen from a bank and sold to German tax authorities has been found dead in prison, Swiss authorities said on Friday. The 42-year-old man was found dead in his cell at Berne regional prison at around 0430 GMT on Wednesday, police said. “Findings so…