
Unavoidable Inevitability
“We have long had death and taxes as the two standards of inevitability. But there are those who believe that death is the preferable of the two. ‘At least,’ as one man said, ‘there’s one advantage about death; it doesn’t get worse every time Congress meets.’”
~Erwin N. Griswold
Just look at them grow… they’re like weeds. Unfortunately, in this case it’s not a compliment for your sibling’s kids. This particular growth is in the data breach lists at Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, Attrition, PogoWasRight, and others. (And please accept my thanks for the time you all put into this public service; I apologize for not including you all by name.)
I have no doubt these disclosures represent the tip of the proverbial iceberg of data that have actually left the control of those to which it has been entrusted. I also have no doubt that we’ve been given this glimpse into the shoddy treatment afforded many of our most intimate personal details solely through some forward-looking state legislation (thanks, California, for helping to start a good thing in the U.S.).
Let’s just jump ahead of all this piecemeal personal information loss for a minute. (Did the WABAC machine have a “forward” lever?) Let’s declare it not only inevitable, but also unavoidable, that, for each and every adult American, their name, social security number, top one or two credit card numbers, street address, date of birth, brief genealogy, and a few other interesting data items are known, collated, and cross-referenced.
But, not by legitimate companies like Experian, TRW, and Equifax. Let’s assume that individuals and groups who do not have our best interests at heart have all of these bits of information correctly assembled into mini-virtual-self-referentially-consistent identities, even if they have no “real life” information on the actual person (e.g., photo, current job, salary, type of vehicle, where your kids go to school, etc.). And, let’s assume they have the ability to keep this information current enough to meet their goals of acceptable cash flow for acceptable risk.
[Aside: Is this feasible? How many databases would I have to subvert in order to get most of this information? One at the IRS, one at a credit agency, one each at a few major banks, and maybe a few others? Remember, I don’t actually have to hack in, I can use social engineering, pay someone, coerce someone, steal the back-up tapes, and so on, and on, and on.]
What then? Is it the collapse of American civilization? I doubt it, but I think it would certainly accelerate some good things and some bad things.
The good things might include something like two-factor credit card use at all times (e.g., you have to show a [new government issue?] driver’s license for all card present credit/debit card transactions). But, what would have to change to allow card-not-present credit card transactions to continue to happen (e.g., most Internet orders, catalog phone orders, Chinese food orders, etc.)? What would it take for Americans to embrace single-use credit card numbers, for example? What parts of the infrastructure would have to change? How would we get and carry around these numbers? And so on.
The bad things might include a new state or national ID that would be required by the credit card companies in order to get a “secure” (whatever that would mean) credit card and a lot of high-end establishments that would start accepting only “VMCAMEXD Secure” for transactions over certain dollar limits or that meet certain risk profiles (e.g., buying for delivery to another country). A treaty with foreign countries could require that “secure” credit cards are the only ones accepted in some situations (e.g., buying a one-way plane ticket to the U.S.).
Beyond that, what would have to change at the IRS now that all SSNs are “public”? What about elsewhere in the Federal government? What would this mean to the Privacy Act? And so on. The mind reels, but it still feels like a good thought exercise.
For me, the question is not “What happens if someone else knows all the data associated with me?” The question is “What financially and socially acceptable capability will make it such that I can unequivocally prove that I’m the only me that goes along with my (now public) mini-identity data (e.g., credit card numbers, social security number, address, genealogy, etc.)?” And, in terms of requirements creep, I’d also like to be able to prove it without giving away my actual identity.
Thoughts? I hate to take you this far and not have something to offer, but I feel qualified only in asking the question, not in postulating an answer. And, of course, my follow-up question is “How are we going to make that software better than the software we have now?”
Technorati Tags: data security, privacy


April 13th, 2007 at 3:51 pm
[…] Sammy aimed two recent entries at those attempting to govern security and expenditure in an organization. I’m using his posts as license to wax more philosophically. Specifically, I’m going to use Digital Rights Management (DRM) as a lightning rod for conversation about protecting data end-to-end in one’s system (the topic of my next–far more focused–post). I’ve been thinking about this ever since McGraw’s Dark Reading column: on Vista, and it’s driven me mad. […]