ID being stolen in Pakistan
Posted By: Sunshine on 2008-03-04
In Reply to: all your information needed to steal your identity - sm - resumes posted
There is probably less chance of your ID being stolen in Pakistan than the United States, where I had my stolen.
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I don't believe it was stolen ...
I think the guy took it home on purpose, sold it, and SAID it was stolen.
He just happens to take the disk home (even though he's not supposed to) and happens to be burglarized and it is stolen? Too much coincidence as far as I'm concerned.
You will think otherwise if your identity ever gets stolen..sm
good luck to you.
Stolen Summer (2002).
Synopsis
In 1970s Chicago, two boys bridge the sectarian divide between the Jewish and Irish-Catholic faiths and forge a friendship. When the Jewish boy discovers he is dying, his Christian friend vows to assist him in his quest to go to heaven, with predictable reactions from their families. This film is the result of Matt Damon and Ben Affleck's Project Greenlight and was well received at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival.
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Stolen computers from the VA Hospital------
Did you hear about the two different workplaces getting their computers stolen? Someone from the Veterens Hospital brought a computer home to their house and then is was stolen. It has at least 50,000 name of Veterens whose medical conditions and personal information was on it. The news said the diagnostic codes are universal and can be easily read. Someone else was on a plane and their laptop was stolen which had Stop and Shop employees info on it. Then at a college in CT someone broke into the computer system and they are not sure what was taken so they sent a letter to anyone who was associated with that college in the last8 years even if you got a letter because you were inquiring about that college and so my daughters had to call the credit bureau to warn them because my two daugters are associated with that college.
Congrats and while you are at it, report your truck stolen by him.
nm
You are absolutely right. Can you believe that they had 2 TDs stolen from them? AND Steelers didn&
The refs must have made out really well with their bookies. It was an abomination.
And you're willing to just accept that? Ever had your identity stolen? I have. It's no treat.
the police have made a report but whoopee, that's not getting my credit back on track. Talk about stress and grief. No one ever cares until it happens to them. What a shame.
Thousands of peoples identification stolen in Rhode Island
to buy state permits.
Yes, the site was stolen. Contact the former owner at mtstars dot net and she'll
xx
They answered. Said he was from Pakistan and that all MTs
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I'm sure India, Pakistan, Philippines...
and perhaps a few others. But the WORLD...no....not even most healthcare providers in the U.S.A. If you really believe what you said, you've have been misled.
Aim the missles at India & Pakistan
One way to get rid of some of our nuclear arsenal....
Yes, he's from Pakistan. He didn't hire himself though.
x
Advertise in India & Pakistan, not the U.S.
The quality I see coming out of Pakistan and Egypt still bites the big one.
:+
how do you know for certain that Sheri is not an honest person? and Dr. Ahmed is from Pakistan, the
or is there any owner here. No one answers any of my questions. I have been posting all day.
It is owned by Zeshan Ahmed from Pakistan. It is no longer
xx
Zeshan Ahmed from Pakistan. He posted it right here. I have zero comfort
this website. I can't believe you would be.
18,000+ have perished in Pakistan. A terrible tragedy has occured in the world, we should
whether offshore services can't work. Any way you look at it, people are people. To the original poster, have some respect.
Death toll in Pakistan rises up to 30,000. Whatever your belief system is please think of the
t
Six Cents is an excellent income if you live in India or Pakistan!
If a client told me that was the rate of pay they're offering, you'd be amazed just how quickly that conversation would come to an abrupt end.
Strike in Pakistan slowing down offshored work here. Just another example of offshore
:+
Remember that Pakistan co who threatened to post medical records on the Net?
REMEMBER WHEN THIS STORY BROKE? Finally, somebody is dealing with the issue. Check this out!
http://www.gcn.com/online/vol1_no1/41035-1.html
VA IT security gaps extend to contractors 06/14/06 -- 04:15 PM By Mary Mosquera,
Rep. Buyer: Department CIO needs IT security enforcement authority [b]The Veterans Affairs Department said today that it has been investigating allegations that an offshore medical transcription subcontractor last year threatened to expose 30,000 veterans’ electronic health records on the Internet in a payment dispute with a VA contractor. [/b] The VA assistant inspector general referred to the investigation during questioning in a congressional hearing on VA’s data security environment in the wake of the theft of sensitive data of 26.5 million veterans, active duty military and reserves officers.
The medical transcription incident highlights how gaps in information security also extend to contractors, said Michael Staley, VA’s assistant inspector general for auditing. Some VA medical transcription contractors have used offshore subcontractors in India and Pakistan without VA’s approval and without adequate controls to ensure veterans’ health information was secure under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, according to an audit released today.
“Contracts do not specify criteria for how to protect information,” Staley told the House Veterans Affairs Committee.
Staley enumerated audits of information management security under the Federal Information Security Management Act, the Consolidated Financial Statement and Combined Assessment Program that revealed significant vulnerabilities. These include VA not controlling and monitoring employee access, not restricting users to only the data they need and not terminating accounts of departing employees in a timely manner.
In last year’s FISMA review, the IG provided 16 recommendations, including addressing security vulnerabilities of unauthorized access and misuse of sensitive information and data throughout VA demonstrated during its field testing. All 16 recommendations remain open, he said.
Audits also found instances where out-based employees send veterans’ medical information to the VA regional office through unencrypted e-mail; monitoring remote network access and usage does not routinely occur; and off-duty users’ access to VA computer systems and sensitive information is not restricted.
“VA has implemented some recommendations for specific locations identified but has not made corrections VA-wide,” he said.
From fiscal years 2000 to 2005, the IG identified IT and security deficiencies in 141, or 78 percent, of 181 Veterans Health Administration facilities reviewed, and 37, or 67 percent, of the 55 Veterans Benefits Administration facilities reviewed.
“We recommended that VA pursue a more centralized approach, apply appropriate resources and establish a clear chain of command and accountability structure to implement and enforce IT internal controls,” Staley said.
The underlying situation is the VA’s department CIO does not have authority to enforce compliance with data security and information management and recommendations from GAO, said Veterans Affairs Committee chairman Steve Buyer (R-Ind.).
Buyer traced problems in security enforcement to a memo dated April 2004 from the general counsel that said the department CIO did not have enforcement authority.
The CIO, undersecretaries who lead VA’s benefits, health and burial administrations, and the VA secretary share responsibility for enforcement, said Gregory Wilshusen, director of information security issues for the Government Accountability Office.
“Information security is a governmentwide problem, and we have talked with OMB about that,” said Linda Koontz, director of GAO’s information management issues.
Buyer expressed frustration that there are no consequences for “recalcitrant” agencies that do not correct problems that GAO has repeatedly highlighted. He cited the Privacy Act, which has been strengthened with consequences.
“If you have a bureaucracy so strong in the department that the secretary or political bodies are unable to act, don’t you think the president or vice president or OMB needs to know that because there are monetary consequences behind that inaction? I’m bothered that GAO doesn’t have the higher authority to which they can turn,” Buyer said after the hearing.
After several more hearings this month, Buyer and his committee will make recommendations or craft legislation. He suggested that Congress consider looking at strengthening FISMA.
“We can even come up with that in our language, but we’re not going to have jurisdiction over that. We’ll have to work with Mr. Davis [House Government Reform Committee chairman Tom Davis (R-Va.)] and his committee. I’d be more than happy to do that,” he said.
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So then this board is now owned by Dr. Zeshan Ahmed from Pakistan? Do I understand you correctly?
So this is NOT AN AMERICAN BOARD ANYMORE?
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