ChoicePoint Update
This story is one that heavily affects my livelihood. You can find my previous posts on the matter here and here.
Privacy is an important issue but before we get carried away with legislation limiting access to personal information we need to consider the people and businesses such limitations effect.
Update:
James Lee, Chief Marketing Officer for ChoicePoint, posted a comment in response to one of my earlier posts about this issue.
We at ChoicePoint understand the concerns and fears that many of the posters to this site have expressed in recent days and wanted to briefly clear up some questions.
First, ChoicePoint voluntarily notified 145,000 people whose files MAY have been accessed in this incident. We did so as soon as the California legal authorities informed us of the extent of the problem.
We've told those potentially affected how ChoicePoint will help them monitor and correct any situations regarding the potential identity theft issues.
We've also changed our internal procedures as part of our ongoing effort to make our databases more secure, and continue to look for ways to further strengthen the vetting process for new customers as well as how we seek potential fraud or abuse once customers begin to use our data.
We understand that there is great suspicion and a lack of understanding about what we do and how we do it. We hope to begin and encourage a broader dialogue on the risks and rewards of information uses.
Hopefully, some of your questions can be answered by checking the homepage of our ChoicePoint website at http://www.choicepoint.com
I'd like to thank Mr. Lee for this thoughtful response, but I must respectfully disagree with some of the points he makes.
He says that ChoicePoint is engaged in an effort to make their databases more secure and to strengthen the vetting process of their clients. Both admirable and neccessary things. But I have two questions:
- Why has my access to data, as a licensed, legal and long-time customer of ChoicePoint, suddenly been restircted? Shouldn't the focus be on newer customers?
- Is this limitation temporary, until ChoicePoint can conduct thorough examination of its clients, or permanent?
- If its permanent, what is the reasoning behind that decision? It is not legal and valid users like myself who are responsible for these problems. I welcome a more thorough vetting process and more scrutiny, but at the end of the day why should my legal access to this information be limited?
Its important to note that ChoicePoint, during the time I have been a subscriber with them, has provided me with excellent service and that their policy changes do not effect other companies from whom I can purchase the same information. My worry is, as a professional, that legislators will use ChoicePoint's blunder as a reason to further limit my already hindered access to certain types of personal information. I feel that ChoicePoint's sudden shift in policy, when looked at from the outside by lawmakers, tends to support the idea that further limiting access for licensed and legal investigators like myself will some how correct this issue. That's just not true. A more thorough vetting process by companies like ChoicePoint before access is allowed would prevent situations like the one we're seeing now without limiting access.
Such limitations impact our society and our economy in a number of ways. If private investigators cannot locate debtors businesses go unpaid. If background checks become more difficult, and thus more expensive, fewer businesses will run them meaning that more criminals will be hired to watch your children or come into your homes and fix your water heaters.













