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ChoicePoint: Personal Data and a Loss of Privacy Overview • • • • • • • The Moment, The Problem Timeline ChoicePoint Background The Personal Data Industry Key Issues Key Players Corporate Communication Issues Now and Going Forward The Moment, The Problem • September 27, 2004 – ChoicePoint discovers possible fraudulent activity within their network of databases – Realizes it may have allowed identity thieves in the Los Angeles area, posing as legitimate businesses (phony insurance companies, check-cashing companies, and other qualifying businesses) to access people’s personal information The Moment, The Problem • Mid-October 2004 – Begin working with LASD – Discover identity theft ring that had set up 50+ fake companies – Criminals received everything from SSNs to credit reports, more than enough to steal identities – 35,000 Californians and 110,000 other people across the country in all 50 states became potential victims of identity theft The Moment, The Problem • Mid-October – LASD delays disclosure to prevent hindering investigation – Under California law, unlike the rest of the nation, citizens must be informed when personal information is compromised The Moment, The Problem • October 26, 2004 – The first and only arrest to date is made – A Nigerian man, Olutunji Oluwatosin, 41, was apprehended in a LASD sting operation – Later sentenced to 16 months in CA state prison, pleading no contest to a single count of unlawful use of personal information The Moment, The Problem • November 9th, 2004 – Executives begin a 6-month program to sell 24% of their ownership in the company – Sell 458,000 shares, $20M+ in market value, $16M in profits, before public disclosure of identity theft problem The Moment, The Problem • February 14, 2005 – ChoicePoint publicly discloses security breach – Sends letters to California residents • At this point, 750 identity theft victims had been identified The Moment, The Problem From February 14th to March 8th Stock plummets nearly 20% The Moment, The Problem • Why did it take four months to disclose the problem to the public? (Oct - Feb) – Initially, LASD did not want to hinder investigation, but what about after that? – LASD reports they told ChoicePoint in a letter to disclose in early November – ChoicePoint says they were told to disclose in January – LASD Lt. Costa: “ChoicePoint must have misinterpreted our letter” Company Background • Founded in 1997 when Equifax, an information management company, spun off its insurance services group • Former Equifax VP, Derek Smith, and Sr. VP of Finance, Doug Curling start ChoicePoint as it is today from scratch • From small insurance arm of Equifax to the premier provider of decision-making intelligence to businesses and governments • Rapid growth through 60 strategic acquisitions • From small insurance arm of Equifax to the premier provider of decision-making intelligence to businesses and governments • Rapid growth through 60 strategic acquisitions Company Background • After 9/11/01, company surges through key acquisitions of Templar Corporation and IMapData Inc. (U.S. Government becomes one of main clients) • Wide client base: – Insurance agencies, corporate employee screeners, check-cashing companies, nonprofit organizations, media outlets, private investigators, law enforcement officials, landlords, other prospective employers Company Background • Now, 19 billion public and private records • Collects and sells financial, medical, and other personal records on billions of people • 50,000+ customers • 5,500+ employees • FY2004 Revenue: $900M+ • FY04 record revenue, growing 14% per year • FY04 Gross Margin: 50% • Profit Margin: 15% Stock Price Data • • • • • • Symbol: CPS on NYSE 52-week range: $36.35 - $47.95 Closing price on April 25th : $39.90 Insider/Institutional: 3% / 82% Market Capitalization: $3.59 B (mid-cap) Market Cap before 2/15/05 : $4.4 B Stock Price Data The Personal Data Industry • $5B Data-brokering Industry • New one-stop shop phenomenon in last 10 yrs • ChoicePoint, Lexis-Nexis, Acxiom • Power of computers, lower costs of data storage, speed of internet • Able to aggregate, store, and retrieve large amounts of information quickly Information Available for Purchase • • • • • Social Security Numbers Current and previous addresses Credit information Employment history Motor vehicle records, driver’s license information and vehicle identification numbers Information Available for Purchase • Police and criminal records (includes 100 million conviction records and prison, parole and release records) • Assets and property • Insurance claims • Professional licenses • Fingerprint checks against those of some 46 million criminals Key Issues • Privacy in the Information Age – Very low due to easy access of rapidly growing technology – Very real, very widespread, universal issue • Pros for this transparency and easy access to personal information – “You can’t get much done in society without a lot of the products they provide” –Steve Harris, Former Sr. VP Corporate Communications, GM – “Hiring somebody, renting apartment to somebody, hiring drivers for your business…” – Fundamental need in society for personal information to ensure safety, legitimacy, accuracy, credibility Pros for ChoicePoint • ChoicePoint helped 100 million American consumers obtain fairly priced home and auto insurance • Helped thousands of American businesses obtain commercial property insurance • Helped 8 million Americans get jobs through workplace pre-employment screening services Pros for ChoicePoint • Helped more than 1 million consumers expedited copies of their vital records: birth, death, and marriage certificates • Helped track down criminal child abductors and deadbeat dads • Just today, ChoicePoint wins contract with...guess who…the state of California’s top prosecutor to keep track of suspected criminals; fundamental need for this information Arguments Against Low Privacy • Personal information falling into the hands of criminals • More vulnerable not only to identity theft, but also to incorrect data profiles • Errors and omissions in the data; what if your employer or prospective employer receives the wrong information? • Misunderstandings between the party using the information and the party that is portrayed – Jeffrey Rosen, The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America “Privacy protects us from being misdefined and judged out of context in a world of short attention spans, a world in which information can easily be confused with knowledge.” Identity Theft • One of the fastest growing crimes in the United States, in upwards of 900,000 people are victimized each year • Costs consumers $5B each year • Costs businesses $48B per year • Threat to consumer confidence • Puts major toll on the economy Current Regulation • Data brokerage industry is largely unregulated • Fair Credit Reporting Act • Truly only applies to credit agencies • Federal Trade Commission principles • Certain types of information such as social security numbers are not to be used for marketing purposes • State Laws • California disclosure only one of its kind; if had not been for this law, ChoicePoint would not have had to disclose breach • Other state disclosure laws limited to certain industries such as financial institutions ChoicePoint’s Corporate Communication Team • Small, consists of three full time personnel • Two of which deal only with employee communications • Have not had any experience with situations such as this Key Players • Derek Smith, CEO of ChoicePoint – CEO since spinoff from Equifax in 1997 – Made Chairman in 1999 – Highly respected in the industry and is seen as being on the leading edge of information technology – Written several books on data privacy Key Players • Derek Smith: Key Players • Derek Smith, CEO of ChoicePoint – Advocate of using technology to combat terrorists and criminals – Make our nation more secure while protecting civil liberties – Serves on board of Society of International Business Fellows – The Educational Foundation of Georgia State University Key Players • Doug Curling, President, COO, and Director at ChoicePoint – Has held CFO position as well – Responsible for ChoicePoint’s acquisitions and thereby, successfully diversifying revenue sources – Emphasizes efficient internal organization in the ever changing technology industry Key Players • James Lee, Chief Marketing Officer – Heads up Corporate Communications at ChoicePoint – In charge of all internal and external messaging Corporate Communication Issues • ChoicePoint knew they would have to come out with the news of the security breach • Required by law to personally contact possible victims in California • So when was it best to contact victims? – November (LASD), January (CP), February (Actual) – 4 months of preparation for the public disclosure • In what form? Letters? Phone calls? • What help to offer? Credit monitoring? Corporate Communication Issues • What to do to resolve the internal security problems? • What to do to reassure the public and investors? • Not only a ChoicePoint issue here, Bank of America, Lexus-Nexus, the whole industry must answer these questions Corporate Communication Issues • Working with Legislators – Potential of being legislated out of business • Privacy rights activists, industry experts, and elected officials calling for closer regulation of companies that compile large databases of consumer information • CEO Derek Smith agrees with need for some level of increased regulation Corporate Communication Issues • ChoicePoint Corporate Communication team – James Lee will need additional help – Did not have a team to begin with – Who to hire as part of full-time Corporate Communications team? – Who to consult? Receive guidance/advice from? Communicate with experts in Corporate Communication and Crisis Management Corporate Communication Issues • Consumer Fear – Definite impact on legislation – What power does the consumer truly have here? • Legal Battles: – California woman begins class-action lawsuit – FTC / LASD investigations into exact timeline, occurrence of events, who knew what? When? – SEC investigations continue regarding executive stock sales Corporate Communication Issues • Several issues going forward: – Contact theft victims – Deal with security controls – Need for increased regulation – Internal Corporate Communication team – Privacy in society, consumer fear – Legal Battles • What steps has ChoicePoint taken? • What steps must they take?