Has anyone else received a letter from the credit rating agency Equifax regarding the theft of your personal data from their inadequate storage facility which is hosted in a foreign country? Apparently, amoungst other organisations, my bank has been on a nice little earner flogging my name, address, date of birth, email address and telephone number to this company. Equifax has then stored the information in the good ole US of A without adequate security safeguards, and now it’s been stolen.
I suspect that authority to sell my details is buried deep within the bank’s T&Cs and that I have agreed to them by default or by not proactively disagreeing. By way of compensation, the company which has negligently failed to protect my personal data and thereby exposed me to a greater risk of identity fraud (Equifax), has offered to protect me against said identity fraud in exchange for even more of my personal data. You couldn’t make this up.
So what is our bold and fearless government doing about this crime which is unfolding in front of them? How will they react to this most serious transgression of the very legislation which underpins the whole of the credit rating industry, The Data Protection Act 1998? Well from what I observe, they are bogged down, wasting time and doing “easy” by pondering the question as to whether someone’s gaze rested for a nano second too long on some bint’s jugs back in 1983.
I suspect that authority to sell my details is buried deep within the bank’s T&Cs and that I have agreed to them by default or by not proactively disagreeing. By way of compensation, the company which has negligently failed to protect my personal data and thereby exposed me to a greater risk of identity fraud (Equifax), has offered to protect me against said identity fraud in exchange for even more of my personal data. You couldn’t make this up.
So what is our bold and fearless government doing about this crime which is unfolding in front of them? How will they react to this most serious transgression of the very legislation which underpins the whole of the credit rating industry, The Data Protection Act 1998? Well from what I observe, they are bogged down, wasting time and doing “easy” by pondering the question as to whether someone’s gaze rested for a nano second too long on some bint’s jugs back in 1983.
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