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Lexis-Nexis
``` [Perhaps someone would like to attend this event and ask L-N to present the proof for its claim that "misinformation has been posted over and over again to various news groups" to the effect that P-TRAK contains credit histories, bank account information, personal financial data, and medical histories.]
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Date: Tue, 12 Nov 1996 19:59:39 -0500
From: The Old Bear
The George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Science Cyberspace Policy Institute
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Tuesday, November 19, 1996 4-6 p.m. Room 410 Marvin Center, 21st & H St. NW, Washington, DC
"PERCEPTIONS AND MISPERCEPTIONS OF PRIVACY ON THE NET"
Speaker: Steven Emmert, Corporate Counsel for Lexis-Nexis
Commentators: William W. Burrington, Assistant General Counsel, America Online Deidre Mulligan, Staff Counsel, Center for Democracy and Technology
Privacy norms, regulations, and laws have been developed over the years, in balance with norms, regulations and laws governing access to government information and open meetings. The advent of widespread Internet use has called into question some previously unchallenged uses of information, reopened discussion on some problems once thought resolved, and raised new questions which have never been addressed. In addition to the commercial players involved, individuals, in greater numbers than at any time in the past, have joined these discussions about the proper uses of information. LEXIS-NEXIS recently experienced this increased individual participation first hand following the release of a commercial product, P-TRAK. This product, which makes limited information about individuals available to LEXIS-NEXIS' subscribers (typically law firms, Fortune 1000 corporations, and government agencies including federal law enforcement agencies) became the centerpiece of an Internet controversy about privacy. Information and misinformation about P-TRAK was widely disseminated on the Internet (and still is) and in the mainstream media. In response to this controversy, the Congress directed the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, in consultation with the Federal Trade Commission, to conduct a study of whether organizations which are not subject to the Fair Credit Reporting Act are engaged in the business of making sensitive consumer identification information available to the general public. Senators Bryan, Pressler, and Hollings have requested "that the FTC conduct a study of possible violations of consumer privacy rights by companies that operate computer data bases." As these studies proceed it will be important for all concerned
Additional information on this and other seminars is available at www.cpi.seas.gwu.edu/Activities/Seminars/96-97.html
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