The Los Angeles Times article features a very anxious mom whose story illustrates a data security issue much broader than lost or stolen laptops with databases of people’s personal info on their hard drives. It’s about what’s happening as “vast databases of sensitive information are bought and sold by private companies” focused a lot more on monetizing millions of registered users than on protecting the users’ privacy. “Reunion.com’s privacy policy says the site “prohibits registration by and will not knowingly collect personally identifiable information from anyone under 13′,” the Times reports. “But that doesn’t address the site’s own data-gathering.” The company told the Times it had bought the records of 260 million people from a data broker that it said was told not to include minors in the purchased data. Still, the name of the mom’s 4-year-old child showed up on a page she stumbled on in Reunion.com. “She was especially distressed that the listing for her husband’s name included the family’s town, Beaverton – not the sort of information she wanted anywhere near her son’s identity.” And now it’s in the L.A. Times too.
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