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Privacy Your Rights Online

New Info-Sharing Regs Make Tracking Easier 19

sgtrock writes: "This one is bad. Really, really bad. According to BankTech News, the U.S. Treasury Department has proposed new regulations that essentially allow banks and the Feds to share information about any individual who ends up on a watch list. This action is based upon their interpretation of the USA Patriot Act. If this goes through, forget your right to privacy, folks. It doesn't exist! Check out the whole story. Write your Congress critters, your Senators, and the Treasury Department. Let them know just how bad an idea this is."
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New Info-Sharing Regs Make Tracking Easier

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  • These are two seperate words folks. It's interesting how ppl get so up in arms about anything that involves information about you. It's not like they are coordinating credit card reports, ATM slips, bank accounts, plane tickets, calls you make, and your electric bill, all to provide you with more directed spam.

    This is being done to *protect* us from *terrorists*, you know, those guys who killed thousands of ppl about 6 months ago (you may have read about it in the newspaper).

    It seems like ppl here get more up in arms than the NRA supporters (no pun intended). Ppl have to understand that some correlation will be done no matter what, regulating this and making it public is better than letting the FBI run amock with there computers and our data.

    Maybe someone can explain to me what danger this puts me in, unless I am a terrorist...

    • It seems like ppl here get more up in arms than the NRA supporters (no pun intended). Ppl have to understand that some correlation will be done no matter what, regulating this and making it public is better than letting the FBI run amock with there computers and our data.

      Speaking as one of those NRA supporters... Because it's been officially announced give us even more reason to complain. Before, we could only speculate and then be shrugged off as paranoid. Now, we can say, "see, they can watch us!"

  • Best to take that brown shirt off to the dry cleaners now, you will want to make a good impression

  • by Deagol ( 323173 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2002 @12:00PM (#3157122) Homepage
    Every payday, I go to my credit union and take out everything but the little money I have automatically withdrawn towards a mutual fund. I then go the the post office and pony up $0.90 for each money order and mail my bills. Of course I hand-deliver some of my bills and paymemts, where the banks have local branches.

    When I first started doing this, it was a little odd and inconvenient. Now, I feel a great sense of liberty. Excepting my bills, nobody knows what the hell I'm doing with my money. Cash transactions are a lot faster at stores, plus there's always money on-hand.

    Ever since the "Know Your Customer" initiative a few years back, and since learning about SARs [treas.gov], I've become even more wary of financial institutions. It's gotten to the point where I'm thinking about socking away my savings (which goes now into mutual funds) into a safe. Mr. Ashcroft can look at my records all he wants and he won't see much. Losing a little bit of interest is worth it to me, in order that I may have a little more privacy in this witch-hunt government we now have to live with.

    I don't like the fact that: 1) My financial history can be reviewed on a whim; and 2) My assets can be siezed almost on a whim. Look at those poor folks in South America, whose banks throttled their own money usage. I won't ever be caught in that situation.

    I usually don't have that much money on-hand, so all you scare-mongers can hold back on the "what if you get mugged" thing. I pay all bills and do any essential expenditures that same day (the big grocery spree, getting car tuned, etc.).

    If only I could force my employer to pay in cash. They recently began requiring direct deposit!

  • There is no right to privacy, not in the constitution at least.

    It might be a good idea though, so why not write your representatives about making it an amendment. It might give all the opposition to these kinds of laws something to stand on.

    • The right to privacy is not mentioned directly in the constitution, but the Supreme Court has ruled that the combination of several ammendments, including the 4th ammendment, creates this right. Of course, this particular law is not about privacy, it's about free speech.
  • Wouldn't this much snooping power simply drive people to do more of their banking offshore? This could actually increase the tax evasion problem.

Do you suffer painful hallucination? -- Don Juan, cited by Carlos Casteneda

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