Every year for the past decade, we've had a major hack involving millions of American's private info.
It's getting impossible to remember I'm how many times Ive been on those lists.
Every year for the past decade, we've had a major hack involving millions of American's private info.
It's getting impossible to remember I'm how many times Ive been on those lists.
Thank you Americans for providing yet another great example to point to, when arguing that holding private data centrally will inevitably lead to it being stolen.
If a vulnerability in a system exists, then eventually someone WILL try to exploit it.
wut. If no vulnerability exists, then someone will try to exploit it.
And a vulnerability exists. It just hasn't been discovered yet.
Easy, just have such terrible credit that it's basically worthless
Taps forehead
Make criminals feel pity.
I'm doing my part!
I'm doing my part!
Maybe use the number for Social Security taxes & benefits only and stop tying everything else to it, which I believe is actually illegal.
Yep, but it doesn't even stop the federal government itself from using it all over.
They already have mine (multiple times); thanks US government/Experian/etc.
I don't think Experian was hacked. It was the other one.
In a system that requires you to give your private keys to the other person for authentication, you basically have to revoke and generate new credentials every time you auth.
So basically we need to get a new passport or drivers license or social security number after every time we take a photo of it or let someone else scan it.
So basically its impossible to protect yourself in this environment
From several years ago Experian was.
AT&T helped share my info more recently also; so many breaches anymore.
I mean, it is a limited data set of less than a billion numbers...
001-01-0000 to 728-99-9999
The area number (001) and group number (01) are also known quantites, so you can limit that set down greatly. 729 to 999 are not in use for example.
~~You're not wrong, but there are enough demographics encoded in one that they could probably match names to a lot of them, if they don't already have them, with some brokered (or stolen) data~~
Not as much data encoded as I thought. Just place of birth, but still. If you are able to get these paired with data, this could be very bad.
Or very good, depending on your opinion of the system 😜
Technically not place of birth, it's the zip code of the address when the SSN was requested, but yeah, close enough for government work! ;)
This could be very painful for a lot of Americans, but if it makes them overhaul the system, it might be worth it.