J. L. Miller reports: Aon Consulting, the state’s benefits consultant, accidentally posted the Social Security numbers, gender and dates of birth for about 22,000 retired state workers on the web two weeks ago, state officials and the company said today. The information was part of a request for proposals that AON had supplied to the…
Last of identity theft/credit card scammers in Russian scheme is sentenced
John Agar reports the follow-up on an ID theft ring linked to Russia (previous coverage here): The last of five suspects sentenced in a credit-card scheme linked to Russia was ordered Monday to spend three years in federal prison. Ameer Spinks, 25, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Robert Holmes Bell. The judge also ordered…
Article: Waiving Your Privacy Goodbye: Privacy Waivers and the HITECH Act’s Regulated Price for Sale of Health Data to Researchers
Barbara J. Evans of the University of Houston Law Center has uploaded a working paper to SSRN, “Waiving Your Privacy Goodbye: Privacy Waivers and the HITECH Act’s Regulated Price for Sale of Health Data to Researchers.” The abstract is: How much should an insurer or healthcare provider be able to charge when selling people’s personal…
MI: Condo Residents Victims Of Identity Theft
Residents living at a local apartment complex find themselves the victims of a nationwide identity theft scam. Many of the victims lost thousands of dollars before police froze their accounts. Police said a dozen residents of a Saline condo community, the Rolling Meadows Townhomes, have become victims of identity theft. Management sent out a warning…
ID thief who had Wells Fargo customer info sentenced
Jonah Hanneke Nelson was sentenced Thursday to 58 months in prison following a plea agreement to resolve ID theft and bank fraud charges mentioned previously on this site. As noted last year, when aw enforcement executed a search warrant on his home, they found the names and account numbers of 550 Wells Fargo bank customers. …
Scottish ministers told to “get a grip” on data security
Ben Borland of the Express reports on previously undisclosed breaches involving PII and/or PHI, but I note that BBC provides slightly different coverage. I’ve indicated the BBC’s statements in italics, below. More than 200 electronic items were stolen or lost in the first six months of the year, including PCs, laptops, phones and Blackberries. The…