Data Miners Moving to Offshore Data Havens 320
schwit1 writes "Washington Post has an article about former TIA personnel moving their data mining operations offshore (Bahamas) to escape
U.S. privacy rules, and to make a buck. I'm waiting for somebody to publish the private data (financial, medical, legal) of federal officials and their families on an open internet web server out of the Bahamas. Is this what it will take for the US to enact stringent privacy rules?"
Vote! (Score:3, Insightful)
Individuals and organizations that will do anything necessary to accomplish their goals, even if that means skirting the law by going outside the country should not be tolerated. In essence, this approach would violate the law, thus this effort at relocation, so why is he supported by members in the current government?
So, taking this further: Let's say that this company screws up in their data collection......what recourse will you have if the company is an offshore company? By what mechanisms will they be held responsible for errors or violations of the law?
All of this is exactly why you need to vote in this coming election. Get out and vote!
Re:Vote! (Score:5, Interesting)
Have you heard of something called "the presidents management agenda [whitehouse.gov]" that the Bush administration has been touting since it came into office. This president has been seeking to outsource all "non inherently governmental" jobs in the US executive branch for quite some time now. The thinking for this is that private corporations will save the taxpayers money by finding efficiencies in doing business that government cannot. But yes, beware of where your personal information may end up!
Re:Vote! (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Vote! (Score:3, Insightful)
I think by "outsourcing", the administration simply means outsourcing to private companies rather than doing everything in-house. The term outsourcing didn't always have the phrase "to India" after it, and I think the original meaning (along the lines of subcontracting), instead of the media-hype-friendly definition that gets used more and more these days, is what was intended.
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
The amusing thing is that under the bush administration 800.000 public sector jobs have been added, which account for a large part of the jobs Bush claims he has created. In fact, as a percentage under Bush the number of public sect
Re:Vote! (Score:4, Interesting)
However, like anything, privatization can be corrupted by people unwilling to play by the rules. That is bad and that should be fixed. However, saying that all privatization is evil Bush facsism, etc, means you are blaming all companies for the problems of one company and one administration.
Yeah, Halliburton getting billions for the Iraq reconstruction is bullshit. But I think the government taking over healthcare costing the taxpayers "more" billions would be just as bad. You have to take each example and judge it on it's own merits. Big government is bad and small government supporting big evil business is just as bad.
Re:Vote! (Score:3, Informative)
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Nay, I say. It is the fault of how our government is set up. Let's face it, when you have too much democracy, and law-making and increased regulation becomes all too easy and common, big money is going to use government to deter competition. We were never meant to have a society in wh
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
Were these people the ones who would pick up the phone if someone calls 911 then?
If that's the case, I'd say having extra staff for 911 service is kind of a good thing. Because when grandma Betsy is laying on the floor, clutching her chest, I'd rather not have a busy signal at 911.
On the other hand if these people were maintaining the system rather than taking calls, that seems excessive.
Re:Vote! (Score:4, Insightful)
Case: the canadian universal health-care system:
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--Pat / zippy@cs.brandeis.edu
Re:Vote! (Score:4, Interesting)
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In one post, you say your healthcare is "FREE!!!!", as in "FREE IPODS!" or "FREE VIAGRA!!" or "FREE BEER!" or "FREE NAKED TEENS HUNGRY FOR YOUR COCK!!!"
But in this post, you admit it is not, in fa
Socialized medical systems (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Vote! (Score:2, Interesting)
Just my 2 cents.
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
Maybe it's just a difference between Canada and the US, but when the US tries to make huge government programs, the politicians end
Re:Vote! (Score:3, Informative)
There are things that can be have cheaper by competition, like peanuts or memory chips. But there are other things that CANNOT have c
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(Its a JOKE!)
Canadian here (Score:2)
Many good doctors have left to the US because being paid for private service is more $$$. We're quite shortstaffed on both doctors and at times qualified nurses. While immediate dangers are quickly dealt with and covered, staff are often less competent due to being worked over hours (severely overworked) du
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
Yup, we pay 50% taxes. Which beats p
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Re:Because you have no military (Score:2)
More importantly, Canada has decided that it would not have an imperialistic foreign policy that insures that many countries HATE it, like the US does... As for the submarines, Canada being a british colony, it has to buy the old britshit junk; this is not limited to submarines, Canada has been
Re:Because you have no military (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Because you have no military (Score:2)
The new cars I am referring to are the Renaissance (dubbed Déplaisance - displeasure by employees) cars, which were to be the Nightstar [emdx.org] trains that were to run between England and the continent. They might have been built by Alsthom, but they have been built
Canadians are fooling themselves. (Score:2)
I think the stumbling blocks until now have been Canadians tendancy for socialised health care, education and the accompanying higher tax rates. Also there is probably some fear in urban areas of the 2nd Amendment, never mind that there are more guns per capita in Canada then the US.
The best solution would be to make Canada a commonwealth of the U.S., like Puerto
Re:Canadians are fooling themselves. (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, there are many other things besides the "market" in life, something yankees fail to understand.
Re:Vote! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:US Govt Health Care == Judges deciding who live (Score:2)
or it could be that he forgot his password... or didn't care to log in... or was on someone else's machine and did't care to post usder their name.
Please don't damn the poor guy for not having a UID.
>>The biggest obstacle to this is the stupid belief americans have that everything that the government does is bad.
Good Point! We must never forget the Louisiana Purchase [gatewayno.com].
Re:Vote! (Score:4, Insightful)
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So the choice is either low-quality healthcare for everybody, as in Canada, or high-quality healthcare for those who can afford it -- as approx. 240 million of the 280 million do in America? (remember, we have some 40m without healthcare, but that is 1/7 of the population -- how about the other 6/7???)
Gosh, let's take the low-quality healthcare. What a smart answer that would be; I'd love to ha
Re:Vote! (Score:3, Informative)
Low-quality health care? Where do you get that notion. Please entertain us. Up here, ev
Re:Vote! (Score:4, Insightful)
- Paying for a smoker's lung removal or a drunk driver's broken back may be an offense to your sense of justice or something, but the fact is that people make mistakes. So you think drunk drivers and smokers shouldn't be covered... what about morbidly obese people? America is certainly full of those... what about people who hurt themselves mountain biking, or playing tennis? They knew the risks, why should we pay for their self-inflicted injuries? For that matter, old people knew they were going to get old, so why the hell didn't they save for their medical expenses? This line of thinking is really quite absurd. We all have frail human bodies, and either we do stupid things to screw them up, or they just fail on their own. We all need fixing, eventually.
- Health insurance companies employ thousands... of beaurocrats. Yes, they're generally good people, and they need to eat too. But it's been shown time and again that a poorly designed government program can't really be justified based on job creation; similarly, neither can the horrendous American health insurance industry.
- Drug companies should be able to recover development costs and make a healthy profit, you'll get no argument from me on that. In the Canadian system, they can do that. Drugs are cheaper here, but that's because America has rolled over and allowed drug companies to do as they please - they get away with truly absurd profit margins.
- America has completely forgotten what insurance is supposed to be about. Everyone pays into a pool, and takes from that pool what is needed. We all pay to support our fellow citizens, and to insure that, should something happen to us, we're covered too. Allowing the young and healthy to be uninsured completely screws this up. So does charging more for smokers, the disabled, those with chronic conditions, old people, etc. That's not insurance anymore. It's especially not insurance when a percentage of the pool goes to profit. Everyone gives, and the guy we trust to hold on to the money takes a cut? I'm not talking about administrative overhead, but rather about pure profit. Again, it's not really insurance if you're paying, but you're not covered in case of X, Y, or Z.
- The Canadian system is not perfect - and that's a symptom of our reluctance to put enough money into it. Canadians want American-level taxes and European-level government services, so it's always tricky balancing these things. The system has its ups and downs... right now, non-critical care is suffering, and that's why you have Canadians showing up in America. It's just an issue of money. The bottom line is that a government healthcare system is non-profit. Private health care isn't. It's well established that government tends to be inefficient, but in this case, your tangled mess of private health insurers, private hospitals, and rediculous litigiousness is far worse. Bottom line: you're getting less healthcare for your money.
Re:Vote! (Score:5, Insightful)
Realistically, there are too many marbles in play right now that are big and money driven. JFK tried screwing around with them, remember the actual money he minted rather than the toy money we use today? 3 guesses why he got killed. Ahh, I'll give it to you; the american government can print off money and spend it, and banks can to (when they give a loan, they only have to have 1/9 of the amount on hand). Additionally, our money is worthless, the only reason it has value is becuase oil countries will only trade in it. Literally, we're getting a free ride. Now, you begin passing around hard currency like silver dollars or something backed up, in contract, by gold, guess what happens to the banks? Banks invest, and indirectly control corporations by forcing them to be greedy tyranical organizations. They also have lots of power considering they have money, and money, entertainingly enough, is power, especially in dire times.
Voting will do jack shit in this situation. They own all the media; airwaves, newspapers, ect. Why is the blackout of other canidates so total? Oh wait, that's right, the CEO gets a call from investors, saying they don't like bush being badmouthed on their media station. The CEO then fires anyone who talks bad about bush, or kerry, or they say "no talking about other canidates" and then kerry and bush are told if they focus on X topics, there'll be no other coverage.
So really, voting will do a whole lot of jack shit in our current situation. Lets just say nader won next election, how quickly do you think he'd dissapear, or be assassinated, or blackmailed into doing bad things?
Frankly, I see this as another way to get the government into the "save us, take away our rights". Seriously, we want them to keep our privacy secure? Ok, we'll make laws that'll effect the little guy (people moving from country to country to evade the law) but decide not to touch the big guy (sony, MS, ect) with a 10 foot pole, and if we do, it'll either be a slap on the cheek or something else. I'v been seeing a lot of that lately, and it's sad that people on slashdot don't quite get it, and even sadder that I'v talked to people who think we should cut the heads off of virus writers infront of their families (for some reason, that seems to be a popular thing).
Kerry agrees with data being moved offshore. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to know why look at who funded the DEMS and GOPs national conventions and you will find your answer.
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
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If you are modding me down because you dont agree with me politically, shame on you. That is censorship and no matter which side of the political fence you sit on, the First Amendment should be sacrosanct.
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
If you are modding me down because you dont agree with me politically, shame on you. That is censorship and no matter which side of the political fence you sit on, the First Amendment should be sacrosanct.
Earth to BWJones: Slashdot is a privately-run geek portal.
The First Amendment (of which I am a diehard defender) does not apply to private entities. It only applies to the government.
Slashdot can censor whoever they want, whenever they want, for whatever reason they want, because it is *their* server
Re:Vote! (Score:2)
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Escape US jursidction != stronger US privacy laws (Score:5, Interesting)
I think if they did something like that, we'd be more likely to invade, though I'd prefer the stronger laws...
Think about what Europe does (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Think about what Europe does (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Think about what Europe does (Score:3, Insightful)
That's like saying "How do you stop exports of goods and services to embargoed countries? It sounds great, just not very enforceable."
This stuff isn't cloak and dagger. It's most often out in the open. You can't stop what you can't see, but most of it is very visible. After all, this is a business, and
Re:Think about what Europe does (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not always a big deal. I work in an area where we have to have quite strong controls over the data we hold. I like to think that we take care over it because it would be wrong to share the data with others. But we also keep control of it because we'd be breaking laws if we shared it. Avoiding break
Re:Think about what Europe does (Score:4, Interesting)
British Columbia just established safeguards to protect personal data against the United States. The province gave a contract to a US-owned firm, and many people were worried that the company would hand the data over to the US government. Rather than give the contract to a Canadian firm, the provincial government effectively banned the company from exporting the data to the US.
Re:Think about what Europe does (Score:2)
Besides competitors, what if the U.S. goverment wanted it? It's a U.S. company, as if they are going to say no. Again it will be a middle manager - I guarantee it. The CEO will 'not want to know about it'. This kind of thi
Re:Think about what Europe does (Score:5, Informative)
The contracts are for the Medical Services Plan, which covers all residents of BC, and Pharmacare, which covers drugs. The provincial government has amended the privacy laws in an effort to satisfy critics, but a lot of people aren't convinced that this will do the job. I can't find an article on the privacy law amendments right off, but here's a link [bcgeu.ca] to a statement by the BC Government Employees Union (which admittedly has other concerns about outsourcing), and here [gov.bc.ca] is a BC government page with relevant information.
Re:Escape US jursidction != stronger US privacy la (Score:3, Insightful)
No, what we need is for someone to show people the kind of information that's been collected on them already, whether by the government or private companies. Say, collect all the info on the staff of the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, Faux News, and members of Congress, then send it to them. Sure, some systems might have to be hacked in t
Re:Escape US jursidction != stronger US privacy la (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Escape US jursidction != stronger US privacy la (Score:3, Insightful)
I wish I could agree with your optimism. We have enough troubles with our physical borders let alone digital ones... I doubt we would have much success in curtailing information transfers...
Similar stunt in portland (Score:5, Interesting)
link to the story (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Similar stunt in portland (Score:2)
Anyways, I agree that expectations of privacy are not always justifiable, but at the same time I believe that privacy should be protectable and enforceable. The two are not the same thing.
In the case of companies moving off-shore, I do believe that the US should (finally) cave-in and enact strict privacy laws, akin to those in Europe. Europe hasn't noticeably suffered from the presence of privacy laws, and even seems to be doin
Ummmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Does this make any sense to anyone?
These companies are moving offshore to escape US privacy laws. So the solution is for the US to enact tougher privacy laws? Wouldn't that just encourage even more companies to move offshore?
I would think the solution would be one of those worldwide initiatives that people around here seem so fond of. (That's sarcasm, if you couldn't detect it.) If a company's moving offshore to escape one country's laws, the only real solution is for that other country and all the other countries around it to enact the same laws. Right?
Re:Ummmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ummmm... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ummmm... (Score:2)
Sure it makes sense... if you're a politician. Fix any problem with more legislation! More laws! More special committees! More money from special interests! The guy who submitted the story is probably a politician.
What? (Score:3, Insightful)
Enact stringent privacy rules? For the US? On Bahamas? Offshore? With the global jurisdiction and universal scope of US law, I presume? How would you want the "federal officials" to do that? Maybe US should "liberate" Bahamas?
Re:What? (Score:3, Insightful)
I assume that this means to stop the data propagation at the point it is collected (in the US), rather than try to control it after the genie is out of the bottle.
I, for one, welcome our new information collecting overlords.
Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What? (Score:2)
Re:What? (Score:2)
hmm... (Score:2)
So, basically, what you're saying is, the ends justift the means? That's a logical fallacy, and is inadmissable as rationale. Try again.
Re:hmm... (Score:2)
Re:hmm... (Score:2)
Re:hmm... (Score:2)
Eh, YOU try again. (Score:2)
It's not even a moral fallacy because sometimes the ends DO justify the means.
Won't happen (Score:5, Insightful)
Until we recognize that just because I gave you my information it does not mean that it is no longer mine, privacy will always take a second place to corporate interests. And, since corporate interests run America, it follows that it will not change.
What is more important is not what corporate America is doing, but how to get the Federal government back into the hands of and for its citizens; although, I really do not think that is possible. Whether you agree with the politics or not, it is suggestive to say that about 50% of the populace believes that Bush's policies are acceptable, which basically includes allowing businesses to ignore any ethical concerns (Halliburton, Microsoft, etc). You can't change corporate America with only 50% of the vote.
Re:Won't happen (Score:3, Insightful)
Am I the only person that saw that line and thought of how big business (RIAA, MPAA, etc) wants to have it's cake and eat it too?
RIAA: You uploaded some music? You're going to jail, punk.
TIA & Data miners: You once wrote your name on a napkin at a diner in Noplace, Arkansas...it's ours now and we can give it to anyone we want.
Re:Won't happen (Score:5, Insightful)
As one person noted, it is interesting that I.P. is the only thing that can be of someone else (generated from common activities), be treated as a loss of property even though it was never produced (piracy), kept as private property (trademarked in a sense), patented to prevent people from reproducing something that they are not allowed to see, and sold as a license to which you must agree without opening the product.
I have a very, very hard time believing that the founding fathers had in any shape for form intended this nightmare.
Forgive my potential shortsightedness but.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Forgive my potential shortsightedness but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Forgive my potential shortsightedness but.... (Score:2)
What it will take? (Score:2)
No, thats what it will take to have the site covertly shut down and its creators shot down.
RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
The guy who designed the system is going offshore, because the government couldn't get the greenlight and hoping to find private backers.
Bell said he did not become involved with Global until after he left government in March.
U.S. Customs for data (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:U.S. Customs for data (Score:2)
The point is, that if it is illegal to export personal data, then it becomes much harder for "reputable" companies to get away dealing with off shore companies that have "smuggled" the data out.
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:There it goes (Score:2, Funny)
Um, no (Score:2)
Um, no because the federal officials don't write the rules. Congress does.
Won't make a difference (Score:4, Interesting)
The really idiotic part was that the class action lawsuite [bizjournals.com] was dismissed because "the class had suffered no damages." One law firm's reaction [wrf.com] was the potential value of this ruling as a defense for future privacy theft instances.
already a precedence (Score:5, Insightful)
There's already a precedence. I don't remember that exact circumstances, but it went something like this: A local newpaper got hold of a list of people who were renting porn from the adult video store. Come to find out, the list included the names of some prominent policitians and judges in washington. The newspaper published the list which caused great embarassment to said politicians. Congress immediately passed an emergency measure which made publishing such embarassing info about politicians illegal.
If these offshore companies try to do the same, you can bet your bottom dollar that Congress will take immediate action to cover their asses. Of course, Joe Citizen will not enjoy the same protection because it's not in the national/corporate interest that his privacy be respected.
Re:already a precedence (Score:2)
Presidne'ts Details (Score:4, Insightful)
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
202-456-1111
president@whitehouse.gov
Salary: $400,000 [c-span.org]
Health Data [google.com]
And here's his attourney [usdoj.gov]
Translation: For those living "in the public life," there is no expectation of privacy, so to expect those in public life to understand the motivation of those of us who appreciate privacy to keep it is like talking about being poor to someone who has been rich all their life: They just can't understand. Heck, the news media mentiones when the President has a physical. Some congressional districts probably do this for their representatives too. This is probably only one of the reasons privacy advocates have a hard time pleading their cause in the US.
Knock knock... (Score:2)
data of federal officials is already online (Score:2)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?node=pol
Private Data? (Score:3, Insightful)
Uhh, exactly how much of this information is private? Usually these systems are merely pulling together public data in an accessible database. Lets keep the strawmen in cornfields.
Also if you were to RTFA (I know, too much to expect from /. story submitters), you would find that there are legitimate reasons for the company to move offshores other than to escape US laws.
Often, The Info Is Already In The Public Domain (Score:4, Insightful)
If some piece of information about me is not legally available to the public, and still appears on the Internet, then someone has broken the law.
So, those who argue for new privacy legislation to curb what they see as violations of their privacy on the Internet are really asking to reclassify as private many types of personal information that have long been accessible to the public.
Suppose, then, that former employees could not verify or deny that we used to work for them. Suppose a bank was not allowed to access the credit history of the guy who wants to buy your house. Suppose your daycare center could not check the criminal record of the kid who wants to be their new driver.
Technology and the Internet certainly ease access to information -- that was the point, after all -- but it is almost always info that was already available to the public.
Legislation that broadens government access to private information is, of course, a different issue.
Data acquired in US (Score:2)
Or am I wrong? Sounds like a monumental loophole that should've been blocked.
The Bush Administration Did The Same Thing (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, this could work out to be kind of an equalizer. Here in this country looking information on public officials could get you an "Ashcrofting." But let some company in another country do the dirty work for you. Hey, what's this charge on Bill O'Reilly's credit card to a place called Vibrator Universe?
Actually, that's nothing compared to what foreign governments are going to do with that treasure trove of information. More likely what will happen is Congress will make it a crime to export data on Congress, and the let the rest of us take up the pooper. Business as usual.
Global Traitors (Score:2)
Their server is in the London Docklands (Score:2)
Re:Here you go, although not from Bahamas (Score:2)
Re:Quick Mr. President! (Score:2)
Not only could they clean up all the corporate tax dodging scum, they could get rid of (or tax and regulate) a vast majority of internet gambling.
I really think that invading the Bahamas makes FAR more sense than invading Iraq -- we would have gotten 200 billion for the tax coffers versus spending 200++ billion for rebuilding Iraq (for which it is difficult to see what we will get in return, if anything).
And you are right - it could be done without using a bullet.
Re:I know I speak for all slashdotters when I say (Score:2)