MessageboardHard- & SoftwareSen. Dianne Feinstein

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registered: 26.10.2013
29.10.2013, 05:38 email offline quote 

Data thieves reach again
consumers.
LexisNexis, a knowledge broker, said it identified the breach before 10 days in a writeup on procedures at Seisint, a Florida firm it bought last year in which already was the subject of controversy.
LexisNexis said it referred the case to federal government law enforcement officials. The FBI said it is checking out.
The company will alert the 32,000 consumers whose details may have been stolen.
The particular disclosure follows that of rival ChoicePoint, which last month said thieves may have gotten access to at least 145,000 Social Protection numbers and other consumer data. Also,www.ativa.se/parajumpers.html, DSW shoe stores said Wednesday that a hacker borrowed credit card and other information of customers at 103 of their 175 stores in the past three months.
The news encouraged consumer watchdogs and lawmakers to call anew regarding legislation to stop information breakins. "We'd better get our own arms around identity theft or else no National is going to have privacy,parajumpers sverige,Inch said Sen. Bill Nelson, DFla. Nelson on Wednesday introduced an invoice that would give the Ftc regulatory power over info brokers such as LexisNexis along with ChoicePoint.
LexisNexis said the data utilized by thieves incorporated names, addresses and a few driver's license records as well as Social Security amounts. It did not include credit history histories, medical documents or financial details. adult, selling it to companies and also to law enforcement agencies.
LexisNexis has been checking the company's protection and other procedures when it noticed irregularities within a "handful" of customer balances. Further inquiry discovered evidence thieves had accessed and possibly duplicated data on as much as 32,000 consumers.
LexisNexis said it is strengthening password and other processes for Seisint customers to stop future thefts.
Seisint come up with controversial Matrix tool providing law enforcement officials the ability to evaluate records about People in the usa for suspected terrorists.
Specialists on data crime say the number of Seisint records tapped is modest when computer hackers often steal thousands at a time.
But the case's better impact will be to place more pressure in Congress to pass bills that experts declare are often opposed by the data industry.
Besides Nelson's bill, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, DCalif., reintroduced in The month of january a version of a California legislation that requires companies to disclose data theft.
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