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Privacy United States Your Rights Online

JetBlue Whistle-Blowers Threatened 14

An anonymous reader writes "Cryptome is reporting that Torch Concepts, the DOD contractor to whom JetBlue gave away its customers' personal information, is now sending cease and desist letters to the privacy activist Bill Scannell (who blew the whistle on the JetBlue scandal) and Len Sassaman, who made the evidence available on his website. The claim made by Torch is copyright violation -- are we about to see the DMCA used to silence corporate and government whistle-blowers? (Ironically, Scannell and Sassaman were two of the key people who launched the campaign to free DMCA victim Dmitry Sklyarov. Karma?"
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JetBlue Whistle-Blowers Threatened

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  • by zenyu ( 248067 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @08:50PM (#7014901)
    As a former Jet Blue customer I am very concerned that they may have released customer data in violation of their privacy policy. Is anyone here aware of what kind of fraud or other laws might be applicable here for me to bring to my attorney general's attention (Eliot Spitzer)?

    I will also be sending educational letters to my representative (Carolyn Maloney-D) and senators (Hillary Clinton-D & Charles Schumer-D), about the DMCA and possibly the need for greater criminal sanctions for the type of activity Jet Blue is accused of engaging in. Any one care to educate me?
  • by sydlexic ( 563791 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @09:14PM (#7015011)
    (Ironically, Scannell and Sassaman were two of the key people who launched the campaign to free DMCA victim Dmitry Sklyarov.)

    please, please explain how this is ironic. it seems more like par for the course for these two.
  • by umofomia ( 639418 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @10:24PM (#7015282) Journal
    I don't know about the veracity of JetBlue's claims, but the CEO of JetBlue issued a letter to its customers saying:
    The sole set of data in Torch's possession has been destroyed; no government agency ever had access to it. With Torch's help, we are continuing to make every effort to have the Torch presentation with the one customer's information removed from the Internet.
    A copy of the letter can be found here [nytimes.com], and the NY Times article about it is here [nytimes.com]
  • by kevin lyda ( 4803 ) * on Sunday September 21, 2003 @03:58AM (#7016457) Homepage
    i support wesley clark's entry into the dems race, but i'd like this explained. in the cryptome cease and desist link [cryptome.org] there was this paragraph:

    Bear in mind that General Wesley Clark, US presidential contender, is/was a member of the board of Acxiom, giant database producer, which sold far more information to Torch Concepts on citizens of the world than JetBlue provided apparently for no cost. As the Torch study proclaims, it was the Axciom data that was much more useful to spy on citizens than that of JetBlue.

    people should politely ask him about it at his weblog [wesleyclarkweblog.com]. seriously, don't be assholes. he has a way to get feedback - use it intelligently. we need to encourage politicians to be more responsive. if clark ignores the issue or gives a poor answer then pester the other candidates on their positions and vote for the ones who answer better. but leave out the insults.

  • Not on main page (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 21, 2003 @04:07AM (#7016472)
    Already hours and less a dozen posts? No "GNA" FP?

    Got the year wrong or something? Slashcode should automatically prevent that.

    I only found this because I searched for "jetblue", after reading Cryptome and this site:

    http://www.dontspyon.us/jetbluescandal.html [dontspyon.us]

    In related news, eBay is spying on its customers [tinyurl.com]. Not much new about that :(

    This story too is buried in the bowels of /. [slashdot.org], but not listed on main page.

    I must not be paying enough attention to /. For all I know perhaps /. has gone into the business of "region encoding" its stories, to segment its readership :)

  • by oliphaunt ( 124016 ) on Monday September 22, 2003 @03:42PM (#7027922) Homepage
    Obviously there are a couple of layers of problem here. One is that JetBlue made a promise to protect privacy, and broke that promise by sending data to a 3rd party. Another is that the TSA appears to *encourage* this kind of abuse, rather than expressing outrage that a carrier would take advantage of their customer relationships in such a manner.

    But I looked at the presentation [abditum.com] last week when this story broke (sorry it's a PDF...). To me, the biggest problem is that on Page 20, you have a whole group of individuals identified by SSN and DOB. If I were one of those people, I would be pretty upset- not just at JetBlue, but also at the careless spreadsheet jockey who posted this to the web in the first place.

    This guy [dontspyon.us] sounds like he's interested in doing something about it.

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