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US lawmakers try to restrict usage of Social Security numbers

By: Jaikumar Vijayan, Computerworld (US online)(05/17/06)

The possibility that U.S. lawmakers might restrict the widespread use of Social Security numbers in commerce because of consumer privacy issues is prompting concern in the financial services industry.

Such a move would rob businesses of a reliable and widely used identity-verification method while doing little to bolster consumer privacy, said Randy Lively Jr., CEO of the American Financial Services Association in Washington.

Lively was one of several industry representatives who testified at a hearing last week on the use of Social Security numbers in commerce. Lively spoke before a subcommittee of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.

"The Social Security number is the only unique identifier in our country that enables a credit grantor, or a credit bureau, or a bank, or an insurance company, or an investment firm to be sure that the consumer they are doing business with" is legitimate, he said. Any attempt to change that use could disrupt the nation's economy, Lively argued.

While concerns about the misuse of Social Security numbers and their link to identity theft are valid, Lively said lawmakers need to understand of the consequences of barring their use for commercial purposes. "What would be put in place if that number were to go away and a new identifier was put in place? And wouldn't that identifier be susceptible to the same kind of fraud?" Lively asked.

The hearing comes at a time of heightened consumer and congressional attention to what has been a stream of high-profile data breaches that have exposed the confidential information of millions of Americans and raised fears of widespread identity theft.

"The concern is that use of [Social Security numbers in commerce] is contributing to the problem of ID theft," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a privacy advocacy group in Washington. Although a Social Security number is not the only source of identity information, "we see it associated with a growing privacy risk," he said.

Rotenberg, who testified at the hearing, said that EPIC supports current efforts by federal lawmakers to restrict the use of the numbers in commerce. One such effort is being led by Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.), who is sponsoring a bill to require the Federal Trade Commission to put rules in place limiting the purchase and sale of Social Security numbers except in certain situations. Another bill, sponsored by Rep. Clay Shaw (R.-Fla.), seeks to prohibit most government and private-sector sale and public display of the numbers.

A statement submitted on behalf of the Financial Services Coordinating Council (FSCC) of the Securities Industry Association warned of "potentially negative effects" if such measures are adopted. Overly broad legislation will raise credit costs, increase fraud and identity theft rates and result in "fundamental and costly changes to internal business operating systems," the FSCC said.

"While the FSCC recognizes that there have been misuses of [Social Security numbers], we strongly urge that any legislation intended to address this problem be carefully targeted to specifically identified abuses, such as measures to stop identity theft," the group said.

It noted that laws such as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and other proposed bills already require companies to take adequate measures to protect sensitive information.

In testimony from the FTC, Commissioner Jon Leibowitz said there are other things that the government and industry can do to reduce identity theft, such as implementing better processes for protecting data and developing better fraud-detection technologies.

The FTC itself will continue to move against companies that fail to demonstrate due diligence in protecting sensitive data, he said in a written statement. "Since 2001, the Commission has brought 13 cases challenging businesses that have failed to take reasonable steps to protect sensitive consumer information in their files," he said. Those cases include a US$10 million civil penalty and $5 million in consumer redress that data broker ChoicePoint Inc. had to pay for allowing identity thieves to gain access to consumer records, he said.

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