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Colorado Ruling
Posted on November 23rd, 2010 No commentsThe Colorado Supreme Court recently over-ruled (4-3) a lower court decision that convicted a man of criminal impersonation when he fraudulently used the Social Security number (SSN) of another when applying for a car loan.
Here is the original post:
Colorado Ruling -
Maine’s High Court to Consider Data Breach Decision
Posted on October 15th, 2009 No commentsAccording to Computerworld, U.S.
Original post:
Maine’s High Court to Consider Data Breach Decision -
LifeLock fraud alerts deemed illegal in ongoing fight with Experian
Posted on August 31st, 2009 No commentsLifeLock fraud alerts deemed illegal in ongoing fight with Experian – U.S. District Court Judge found that its practice of placing fraud alerts on customers’ credit reports is illegal.
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LifeLock fraud alerts deemed illegal in ongoing fight with Experian -
ABA Sues FTC Over Applying Creditor ‘Red Flags Rule’ to Lawyers
Posted on August 28th, 2009 No commentsThe American Bar Association filed suit Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia against the Federal Trade Commission, seeking an injunction to block the application of the so-called “Red Flags Rule” to practicing lawyers.
See more here:
ABA Sues FTC Over Applying Creditor ‘Red Flags Rule’ to Lawyers -
Judge to rule in LifeLock-Experian fight
Posted on August 25th, 2009 No commentsA U.S. District Court judge in the Central District of California is expected to rule this week on competing motions in a legal battle between credit bureau Experian and Tempe-based identity-theft protection firm LifeLock Inc.
Go here to read the rest:
Judge to rule in LifeLock-Experian fight -
Fact Sheet 109 – The Court Experience
Posted on August 21st, 2009 No commentsFact Sheet 109 – The Court Experience Victims whose cases do go to trial may find this fact sheet a valuable guide.
The rest is here:
Fact Sheet 109 – The Court Experience -
Hannaford’s Motion to Dismiss: Victory for Merchants (Part 2)
Posted on May 28th, 2009 No commentsAs detailed in ISC’s first post on the Hannaford case, I detailed the District Court’s rationale for either dismissing or generally recognizing various legal theories around payment card number security breaches.
The rest is here:
Hannaford’s Motion to Dismiss: Victory for Merchants (Part 2) -
Your Not-So-Secret Questions
Posted on May 19th, 2009 No commentsTechnology Review, published by MIT, has an article that is highlighting a personal crusade of mine. Your secret questions are not all that secret! I’ve said many times that most security questions are answered truthfully, and most of those are easily obtained or guessed. What town you grew up in, what high school you attended,
Follow this link:
Your Not-So-Secret Questions -
SPA White Paper
Posted on May 19th, 2009 No commentsIn February 2009, the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) conducted a survey seeking answers about consumer awareness of data exposure breaches, how they feel about the safety of their personal information when used online, as well as their level of interest in improving their online information safety.
Read more here:
SPA White Paper -
Hannaford’s Motion to Dismiss: Victory for Merchants…
Posted on May 19th, 2009 No comments… at least against consumer class action lawsuits. The United States District Court of Maine recently rendered its ruling on Hannaford’s Motion to Dismiss the consumer class action lawsuits against it.
See the original post:
Hannaford’s Motion to Dismiss: Victory for Merchants…
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