ChoicePoint, the massive data broker made infamous for selling 163,000 customer records to identity theft fraudsters, is on a comeback tour. On Sunday, the New York Times ran a 3,400 word piece ...
Data broker ChoicePoint, the victim of a 2004 data breach affecting more than 160,000 U.S. residents, has agreed to strengthen its data security efforts and pay a fine for a second breach in 2008, the ...
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In August, the police in Corona, Calif., got a surprising phone call. The caller said an auditor needed to examine the department’s facilities and take pictures inside. To the security-conscious ...
WASHINGTON - Sen. Charles Schumer leaned forward in his chair at the Senate Banking Committee's March 10 hearing and interrupted Federal Trade Commission Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras - again.
As data broker ChoicePoint wrestles with the fallout from the sale of personal data to identity thieves and an investigation into two executives' sale of company stock, it faces questions on another ...
The Federal Trade Commission said Thursday that data warehouser ChoicePoint Inc. will pay $15 million to settle charges that its security and record-handling procedures violated consumers' privacy ...
Embattled personal data vendor ChoicePoint said on Friday that it will stop selling sensitive consumer data to many of its customers, except when that data helps complete a consumer transaction or ...
ChoicePoint, the data broker that leaked information on about 145,000 Americans, says it has completed changes to its business to prevent such a breach from happening again. "In fact, we've gone ...
ChoicePoint Inc. will pay $15 million to settle charges that it failed to protect consumers' personal information, the Federal Trade Commission announced Thursday. It is the largest civil penalty over ...
The embattled data broker ChoicePoint Inc. said Friday it no longer will sell sensitive consumer information to small businesses, and the company's chief executive said he did not learn of a major ...