The investigative journalists at the Carolina
Journal recently
discovered that North Carolina governor Bev
Perdue had been receiving confidential employment data from the
Department of Labor possibly days in advance of its official
relief. As they pointed out, this was “quite likely in violation of
federal law,” the Confidential Information Protection and
Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002. What makes this disclosure
worse is that the governor’s press office often rewrote the federal
press release “and added a positive spin, even if the data did not
support Perdue’s talking points.” If politicians and bureaucrats
treat official data this cavalierly for their own ends, what are
they likely to do with your personal data?
According to a new Government
Accountability Office (GAO) report, the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) has consistently failed to properly secure
sensitive tax and financial information. GAO “testing showed that
systems used to process tax and financial information did not
effectively prevent access from unauthorized users
or excessive
levels of access for authorized users.”
Worse, the GAO found that even though the IRS conducted
regular system checks, it failed to detect the problems. “These
vulnerabilities were not known to IRS despite those systems being
in compliance with the agency’s policies on periodic control
reviews and testing,” says the GAO report. Identity information is
required to pay our taxes, register property, and get government
benefits — but that information is not secure and the government
doesn’t know why.
The GAO report was prompted by a spate of government
security failures. In 2006, the personal information of 26.5
million veterans was stolen from the home of a Department of
Veterans Affairs employee. In 2007, the State of Georgia lost
Medicaid records for 2.9 million people. California and
Pennsylvania have lost thousands of Medicaid records
as
well.
The problem is about to become much worse. The Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) has proposed a rule under
Obamacare that would centralize everyone’s patient and hospital
records. Yet an HHS contractor recently lost health care
information for nearly 50,000 Medicare recipients. Individual
health care records are some of the most private papers Americans
have. If a bank lost your personal account information, you’d
probably want to find another bank. If a store lost your loyalty
card information you probably wouldn’t be loyal to them anymore.
But the government doesn’t give you a choice, and requires your
loyalty.
These mistakes haven’t slowed down the government’s desire
for more information and power. Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX) pushed to
mandate E-Verify for every U.S. employee and business through the
Legal Workforce Act (H.R. 2885). E-Verify is an electronic
employment eligibility verification system designed to check an
employee’s immigration status and identity information against a
government database before approving him for work. Whatever you
think about immigration, that Americans have to ask government
permission to be employed is outrageous. E-Verify takes us one step
closer to a “papers please” state.
Moreover, the centralized database that E-Verify would
require would make for a tempting target for identity thieves, as
it would include a new hire’s name, Social Security number,
address, age, picture, maiden name for women, and often a driver’s
license number.
Worse, the federal government’s effort to centralize all
worker information comes on top of its failure to secure its own
employees’ confidentiality. In 2006, for example, the
Transportation and Security Administration accidentally mailed
nearly 1,200 of its employees’ Social Security numbers and birth
dates to the wrong addresses. The same year, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture lost the personal information of nearly 26,000
employees.
Obamacare and E-Verify’s “on-the-books” databases aren’t
the only ones Americans should fear. In 2006, a USA Today
investigation revealed that the National Security Agency (NSA)
maintained a database of nearly 2 trillion calls provided by the
four largest telephone carriers (AT&T, Verizon, SBC, and
BellSouth). The year before, NBC News uncovered a Pentagon database
of information on peaceful protesters — the so-called TALON
program. Although both programs were officially closed, the
information is still out there — the NSA retained its call files
and TALON’s data was handed over to the FBI’s Guardian
database.
Almost 4.2 million Americans have access to “classified”
information. No wonder the government leaks like a colander. Of
course, leaks are not unique to the government, but consumers have
recourse against firms that mishandle their information. They can
withhold their business, switch to a competitor, or file a lawsuit.
Taxpayers can’t go elsewhere and no federal bureaucracy has ever
filed bankruptcy. All they have is a supposed right “to be secure
in their persons, houses, papers, and effects.” Until government is
downsized and declawed, that right will continue to look paper
thin.
L. Ross| 12.27.11 @ 7:45AM
Mr. Murray: "Whatever you think about immigration, that Americans have to ask government permission to be employed is outrageous. E-Verify takes us one step closer to a "papers please" state."
I have to ask, what exactly would you do to curb illegal immigration? If not E-Verify, then what. And don't tell me "seal the border". We have demonstrated as a nation time and again that we don't have the stomach nor the money nor the interest to seal the border. What draws latinos into the U.S. is jobs. Menial low paying jobs in the U.S. are better than menial low paying jobs in Mexico, so here they come.
Your larger points about government mishandling of private data are not to be minimized, but as a former California resident, let me assure you the illegal immigrant problem has gone way beyond a crisis. I used to look around, suprised, when I heard English being spoken in a Home Depot in California.
Harry the Horrible| 12.27.11 @ 9:19AM
Actually, what draws 'em is jobs, plus government bennies. Since apparently illegals can't be denied access to the welfare system, their earnings go a lot farther than they would for an American...
TrueBlue| 12.28.11 @ 6:51PM
They're also not held accountable under the law in most cases.
A. C. Santore| 12.27.11 @ 11:28AM
You got your subtitle wrong. It should be abbreviated to: "Don't trust government."
rendite| 12.27.11 @ 2:40PM
Your opening paragraph says it all regarding government info spin on just about everything. You mention NC Governor Bev Perdue's staff (translation: North Carolina State Public Affairs Officials -- on the taxpayer dole) massaging the message.
Yep. This is what offiical government release information ALWAYS does.
After all, it is not like these information managers (spin folks) don't have a dog in the fight or can be impartial.
So: Through your tax dollars, we prop up "highly trained Information Management officers" equip them to the hilt with the latest cutting edge tech hardware, software, video, audio equipment, etc. to lie to you. Often.
If you are in a city big enough, the city government offices do the same. So this is done to you at city, county, state, and national level. Oh, for the "worldies" the UN, NATO, IMF, World Bank..... all have legions of these "public information white collar professionals."
Do you get it? This is a huge career field. Places like Columbia University churn out these spinmeisters annually.
Welcome to how you are stolen from, misinformed, and deceived -- every week of the year. (these people have no introspection, no consciences; they all think they deserve raises and more perks)
SGT Baker (native Coloradoan)| 12.28.11 @ 3:45AM
uhmm Information Management Officers, IMOs, are information security professionals not PR reps.
RAMIII| 12.27.11 @ 3:00PM
There is no shot that government will ever be downsized. With all due respect, this is a situation where the cat is already out of the bag.
e track from saq| 12.27.11 @ 4:04PM
There should exsist a legal remedy for accessing your own personal data,not only the junk that Uncle Sam has but also those data junkies over at Google.I would love to get my lawyer involved in what seems like an act of stalking.Or how does the information effect you negatively when government or corporations turn nefarious.
POST American| 12.27.11 @ 10:05PM
-----Putting to one side the FACT that
microwaves damage DNA and forment
cancer
THE FACT IS the PC is a full-spectrum
data collection and surveillance device
and was ALWAYS intended to be such.
Likewise the cellphone, the 'Smart Meters'
and GPS and 'On STAR' systems in your
cars.
Further, take heed, all CCTV is linked as
well and can be, and is, readily accessed
by those above and below.
---------BEYOND Nuremberg 2012!
----------------HAPPY NEW YEAR----------------------