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these companies need to sued for a lot of money before they use encryptions and other secure methods. Average thief will probably sell it for $200 anyway--unless they see what's in there.
As it is illegal to store these I highly doubt it... if they were it would land hotels.com in the ****.
Under the Card Scheme Rules, which all merchants are supoosed to abide by, no-one, repeat no-one, is permitted to store the CV2 (the security code on the signature strip). But, that doesn't stop some from doing so.
Here's the kicker, and something few are aware of. He went to prison, where he immediately used "discovery" to demand all of his court records in order to file an appeal. The court records had all of the info he had stolen, which he then began selling to his fellow inmates, who in turn sent it out to the streets where it was used for more ID theft activity.
Wonderful system we have, isn't it.
The above caused my wife and I to lobby the State legislature. In the end, Oregon now has a law that requires that all personally identifying info be redacted from any documents provided to prison or jail inmates.
Where do you live? Are you protected?
WBF
To be fair, it could have been another hotel program, I don't rightly remember. But it was still really troubling, especially how I couldn't make them understand why it was an issue.
VA Loses Data on 26 Million Veterans
[consumeraffairs.com...]
Since I'm a veteran, I just received snail mail alerting me to the issue this morning.
However, the data did include names, addresses, Social Security Numbers, and some information relating to individuals' disabilities.
Looks like Stolen Laptops are going to be the demise of our personal identities. In addition to everything else going on. ;)