On Fri, Jul 08, 2005 at 01:32:34PM -0400, Tyler Durden wrote:
That is interesting. One wonders if in certain circles of Russia people are much more careful with their data and encrypting it. Who knows? A country like that might evolve some fairly rigorous privacy procedures. Here in the US it's, "Our data is safe because people will go to jail if they hack it and sell it."
Unless, of course, your data falls into the hands of Choicepoint, Lexis Nexis, etc. Mostly in order to avoid a legislative crackdown that puts them out of business, they probably put some effort into vetting who gets to see the magic bits (unlike our Russian streetcorner pals). But we saw how well that worked with Choicepoint. And they are all fairly large companies; all it takes is one well-placed database admin with bad financial troubles... -Jack