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Privacy Government The Almighty Buck United States

The California DMV Is Making $50 Million a Year Selling Drivers' Personal Info (vice.com) 62

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: The California Department of Motor Vehicles is generating revenue of $50,000,000 a year through selling drivers' personal information, according to a DMV document obtained by Motherboard. DMVs across the country are selling data that drivers are required to provide to the organization in order to obtain a license. This information includes names, physical addresses, and car registration information. California's sales come from a state which generally scrutinizes privacy to a higher degree than the rest of the country.

In a public record acts request, Motherboard asked the California DMV for the total dollar amounts paid by commercial requesters of data for the past six years. The responsive document shows the total revenue in financial year 2013/14 as $41,562,735, before steadily climbing to $52,048,236 in the financial year 2017/18. The document doesn't name the commercial requesters, but some specific companies appeared frequently in Motherboard's earlier investigation that looked at DMVs across the country. They included data broker LexisNexis and consumer credit reporting agency Experian. Motherboard also found DMVs sold information to private investigators, including those who are hired to find out if a spouse is cheating. It is unclear if the California DMV has recently sold data to these sorts of entities. In an email to Motherboard, the California DMV said that requesters may also include insurance companies, vehicle manufacturers, and prospective employers.
Marty Greenstein, public information officer at the California DMV, said that its sale furthers objectives related to highway and public safety, "including availability of insurance, risk assessment, vehicle safety recalls, traffic studies, emissions research, background checks, and for pre- and existing employment purposes."

"The DMV takes its obligation to protect personal information very seriously. Information is only released pursuant to legislative direction, and the DMV continues to review its release practices to ensure information is only released to authorized persons/entities and only for authorized purposes. The DMV also audits requesters to ensure proper audit logs are maintained and that employees are trained in the protection of DMV information and anyone having access to this information sign a security document," Greenstein wrote.
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The California DMV Is Making $50 Million a Year Selling Drivers' Personal Info

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  • I thought CA made it illegal to sell this information after the Rebecca Schaeffer murder?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Cant ask the gov for background checks? That would be an interesting change to laws.
      Have to trust fake, stolen, shared, created ID presented by criminals, illegal migrants?
      Thats why background checks are done. So the person "working" has the qualification needed to be trusted with a car, van, truck, suv ...
      Trusted with the contents, any passengers.
      • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Monday November 25, 2019 @07:40PM (#59454736) Journal

        If you don't trust yourself to look at the license, one could query the DMV asking "is this DL number valid with this name?" Thr DMV would reply yes or no. There is no need foe the DMV to sell information in order to verify an ID.

        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          The "license" used for "work" could be created from shared data sets, fake, junk... how is a "look" going to help in any way?
          A lot of information goes into a background checks ... not just the same data presented on "one" presented fake, stolen, created "license".
          Thats why its a background check not just a license check.
          Slowly the criminals and illegal migrants using shared, stolen, fake, created ID get detected.
          • > how is a "look" going to help in any way?

            First, actually looking at the ID fulfills your legal obligation, which is a significant help right there. You did the due diligence required.

            To go beyond that, for older licenses feel it and compare to a legitimate document. Feel for raised edges, glue lines or bumpy surfaces by the photo or birth date. Uneven surfaces often indicate tampering. Feel for cut-out or pasted information. Ceck the thickness / stiffness of the ID. It may have been re-laminated aft

            • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
              Again that "look" is only as good as a criminal, illegal migrant can afford to pay for created ID.
              A background check will see if more of the fake, shared, created, stolen data sets exist, are in use, are fiction... dont exist...
              A "look" at ID is not a background check.
              • > A "look" at ID is not a background check.

                And knowing what kind of car the owner of the license has *is* a background check?

                • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
                  The background check should at least show if the created ID is the only ID the person has had, ever had, that has ever existed for that criminal, illegal migrant :)
            • California isn't RealID compliant (no citizenship check), so did they bother with all those security features?
              • California isn't RealID compliant (no citizenship check), so did they bother with all those security features?

                Well, if they aren't by compliant by I believe Oct 2020, then NO people from CA will be able to fly, unless they all get passports.

                Their non-RealID drivers licenses won't be accepted at airports in the US any longer.

                I think the RealID thing sucks and wish more states had fought it, but that's where it stands.

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday November 25, 2019 @06:41PM (#59454516) Homepage Journal

      I thought CA made it illegal to sell this information after the Rebecca Schaeffer murder?

      They made it illegal to sell it to random jerkoffs. Now they only sell it to specific jerkoffs.

    • by jwymanm ( 627857 ) on Monday November 25, 2019 @07:01PM (#59454600) Homepage
      It was illegal and broke their own laws so they retroactively tried to apply a new law to make it legal since the fine would've sunk them.
  • by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 ) on Monday November 25, 2019 @06:13PM (#59454384)
    I don't care what you're supposedly using the money for, don't "sell" personal data.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Why is it so wrong to ask the gov if a person who says they can "drive" as part of "working" is actual that person and can "drive"?
      They might have a fake ID, shared ID, stolen ID, be an illegal migrant, a criminal.
      That data set may not match what that gov has.
      The fake information can be detected when listed by the gov vs what the person attempted to show as their ID for work.
      • Did you not even read the summary?

        They included data broker LexisNexis and consumer credit reporting agency Experian. Motherboard also found DMVs sold information to private investigators, including those who are hired to find out if a spouse is cheating.

        I should not be just a Lexis/Nexis account away from getting your personal info. Stalkers can get credit cards too, you know.

        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          So no more background checks? Anyone can show up for "work", show an ID they had created and it has to be accepted?
          • I guess that's how it will have to be. [wikipedia.org]

            Or, you know, there could be limitations on who can get the data and what data they get. But that's just crazy-talk.
            • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
              Thats a data set for the gov to sell, allow "free" access, offer FIOA access... say no to every request.
              The "who" listed so far is "including availability of insurance, risk assessment, vehicle safety recalls, traffic studies, emissions research, background checks, and for pre- and existing employment purposes"
              Academics who are trusted to work with huge data sets... insurance and ..... "background checks"...
              Vehicle safety recalls - again a good thing.
              Emissions research - great to be seen doing very gree
    • I don't care what you're supposedly using the money for, don't "sell" personal data.

      Would you prefer they spend the time, effort, and manpower to give it away for free?

      I mean, I hear you Californians hardly pay any taxes these days, so what's one more...

    • by BPinard ( 971384 )
      When a large company says they don't "sell" data, the truth is much worse. They GIVE it away.
  • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday November 25, 2019 @06:14PM (#59454386)

    California has 26 million licensed drivers, so $52M is $2 per driver. Two bucks is the price the State of California puts on the privacy of citizens.

  • It's called a MVR (Score:4, Informative)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday November 25, 2019 @06:15PM (#59454394) Homepage Journal

    Or Motor Vehicles Report. There used to be two kinds of MVR, one that only shows what's on your record now and another kind which shows your complete history, but they've recently done away with the low-information version. It costs five bucks to get one, whether it's yours or someone else's. You have to provide identifying information to get one, and if it's not yours you're required to provide a reason why you should be able to get it. Prospective and current employers can get them for [prospective] employees who [will] operate a vehicle in the course of their employment, although they often require you to go in and get your own so they don't have to pay for it.

    It should be illegal to charge you more than actual costs to sell you data about yourself. Like, a dollar, tops. They laser print it, it's not like they have to pay a calligrapher.

  • Tay payers get some money back.. that's good.
    Information from the gov is often free, at a low cost to look over per request by a citizen.
    Can look at one document? Why not pay to look at all of them?
    What is so evil about that list?

    Re "insurance, risk assessment, vehicle safety recalls, traffic studies, emissions research, background checks, and for pre- and existing employment purposes"
    A citizen has insurance? Whats wrong with getting the gov side of that persons ID?
    Risk assessment? Asking the g
  • Some of the stated uses sound legitimate. But giving it to private investigators doesn't, or at least "ending up" at private investigators through 3rd parties doesn't. As usual, the devil's in the details about how what info gets to who.

    Data is so easy to copy and share these days that it's hard to keep a lid on it all.

    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      In addition, the guy who murdered Rebecca Schaefer used a PI to obtain her address from the DMV.

  • I've found that the State of California in general violates privacy, and more than the federal government. The DMV seems to operate according to the term "quasi-statutory" inasmuch as it behaves as though it can act above California law. I had to do a legal name change some years ago solely for the DMV, as it would not renew my driver's license unless the name on it matched my Social Security card name. The SSA required no such thing to accept the name I'd been using for years. I also found that the Emp
    • by nnull ( 1148259 )

      I found the solution is quite simple. Start feeding all this data collection with fake data. We're all used to putting our information as accurately as possible, start doing the inverse. Spelling mistake there, address number mistake here, etc. Just keep track of it with your own excel, or keepass, whatever.

      I've noticed there is no one worthwhile to go through all this massive data and correct the mistakes and it stays there forever. It completely messes with their tracking.

      • We're all used to putting our information as accurately as possible, start doing the inverse [...] I've noticed there is no one worthwhile to go through all this massive data and correct the mistakes and it stays there forever.

        The DMV tends to make mistakes all the time, for example they wanted to charge us some massive fee to register a bus we bought for $5k because (AFAICT) someone at the DMV hit the 0 key one too many times, and recorded the sale price as $50k. They don't catch those errors, but the errors YOU make are flagged by the system. And if they get your address wrong, you don't get your ID, or your title, etc.

      • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Monday November 25, 2019 @06:53PM (#59454574) Journal

        Start feeding all this data collection with fake data.

        Law enforcement tends to frown on fake information on your driver license.

        Many years ago, a friend told me that he had got a credit card in the name of (I think) "Abraham Lincoln" (easy to do if you request an additional cardholder for your credit card account) and used this in place of the credit card in his own name for the purpose of creating fake data.

      • Pretty much every State form you sign in California consists of a statement that you swear, under penalty of law (perjury) that what you provided was true. I guess you could feed them fake data, but if you end up spending a year in prison because of your protest, well...
    • I had to do a legal name change some years ago solely for the DMV, as it would not renew my driver's license unless the name on it matched my Social Security card name. The SSA required no such thing to accept the name I'd been using for years.

      The ID from the DMV is an authoritative legal document, used for proof of identity. As such, the name on the ID matches your legal name. I know a guy who changed his legal name to Rodent, one word. It's on his ID.

      Knowing these things, I will not be getting a California Real ID, but a passport instead.

      The passport will have your legally registered name on it, too.

  • As a purchaser of primarily used vehicles, we get a mailed solicitation for an extended warranty immediately after every purchase, as well as a noticeable uptick in solicitations with a gecko on the envelope.

    The information is probably out there anyway from the latest governmental data privacy snafu. Is it more ethical to purchase the information directly from the States, rather than dabble around in Bitcoin on the dark web locating the newest data breach?

  • ...the same info they sell, they refused to provide to Trump's Election Integrity Commission, which sought to reconcile all the voter databases. Funny, eh? Must be related to lios angeles having 110% voter registration ;-)
    • What's really funny is the use of made-up statistics and the absolutely batshit-crazy beliefs about how widespread voter fraud is.

      I do agree that it would be nice if CA would take the same bold stance with vendors flashing cash that it quite justifiably takes with political snipe hunts, but I don't know that my state is any better.
      • He was wrong [sandiegouniontribune.com], it was 112%, not 110% for Los Angeles County.
        • I think you might want to read your source a little more carefully. That's an allegation made by Judicial Watch, an organization which churns out enough false claims to support its own dedicated Snopes-like fact checking site.
  • Criminals. The state blocks or hinders private companies that selling anonymized data after obtaining permission from users so they can do stuff like this. Sickos. Thats why we need tentacle-free weaker governments.

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Monday November 25, 2019 @07:09PM (#59454636)
  • It scrutinizes private corporations to a higher degree, because they are a centuries-old boogieman for politicians to ride to power on.

    Government itself is voratious for money to lavish on voters.

    There is nothing confusing about this if you use the old tried and true rule of thumb follow the money (and power, which is for money)

    I know you are all shocked! Shocked!

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I thought it was highly troubling for private corporations (whom you can voluntarily associate with) to sell your data for financial gain, and that the Government (Federal, State, or local) as the answer to all and would never hurt us, even if they can compel you to provide private data via their own ability to write and enforce laws. So how can this be bad?

    Do I really need the /sarc tag?

  • The issue with "State" profiting from the workers is where does the money really go? Is it time that ALL politicians disclose their tax/income records? Especially CA, earning the millions of dollars on a hundred thousand dollar salary sure makes one wonder. Too many people without jobs, homes, food, proper medical care or a future have brought down countries in the past. The elite greedy or the greedy elite are living on borrowed time.
  • I'd like to ask that the CA DMV increase their price in order to bring greater revenue to the state. Let's say increase it by 100x every year.

  • I mean this is what happens when you cant sustain the state costs even though you have the highest state income tax in the nation.
  • i hope a gang of jewish lawyers rip the Cali DMV apart
  • These days, you need to be especially careful with your personal data. Recently I ordered research on this topic on essay editing service here https://uk.edubirdie.com/essay... [edubirdie.com] and after reading it I was very surprised at how much people are not protected from information leaks and other similar things. And many do not know about this at all.
  • > "The DMV takes its obligation to protect personal information very seriously."

    Why do they bother even starting with such meaningless words?

    It's the same as when I call a business and they say "your call is very important to us" and "sorry for the inconvenience". Those phrases have lost all authenticity.

  • The address of my property and my name are public record because I own a house.
    This seems like something of the same case, at least in the 'old days' it would have fit pretty well.
    You own a car, that ownership , your name, and address needed to contact you if your car is found or involved in an accident and runs away is reasonably considered 'public' information.

    • As a side thought. This doesn't include SSN so it doesn't actually fully identify anyone. Pick almost any name, there are usual a few hindered to many thousands of people with the same name. Given the address, you don't really know which one.

    • You own a car, that ownership , your name, and address needed to contact you if your car is found or involved in an accident and runs away is reasonably considered 'public' information.

      The Driver's Privacy Protection Act seems to think it's reasonably "private" information, unless you qualify for an exception, and makes it a crime not to protect it...

  • From an operational standpoint, state DMVs have got to be the most abused of the state-level institutions.

    SOME of the services provided by the California DMV--
    -- Vehicle registration
    -- Vehicle and non-vehicle license plating
    (Sales/transfers of the above)
    -- Clean Vehicle tracking
    -- Licensing vehicle manufacturers, sales, and scrappers
    -- Driver's licenses
    -- State ID
    -- RealID
    -- Driver Education & Testing
    -- All other road user pseudo-education
    -- Fines collections
    -- Policy Development
    -- Manage the mandatory

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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