Privacy Is Dead: All Your Personal Information Can Be Found
Private eye Steven Rambam explains what he does, how he knows everything about you and why he's not the one you should be worried about.
Should businesses hire a company like yours?
They should if they don't want a back door or a Trojan [horse] on their system. A year ago, a company called me from Hong Kong and said, "We're being extorted. We're getting e-mails from an individual saying if we don't give a series of payments through PayPal, he is going to take [our] source code and post it on the Internet."
We were able to determine who the guy was in 24 hours. He was a 14-year-old kid in California.
What about smear campaigns on the Web? If you're a victim, what should you do about it?
You have to have zero tolerance. You have to find out who the person is, and you have to sue them within an inch of their life, and you have to do it publicly and post it on your Web site, talking about the entire case from beginning to end.
Government databases are the biggest repository of private information. Should the public be concerned about that?
The scary thing to me is not that information is open, but that the government is trying to use every pretext and every trick to hide information from its citizens. That I think is much more nefarious and will be much more detrimental in the long run than having information out there.
Some of the things the Bush administration is doing are just incomprehensible. For example, they're reclassifying data that's been in the public eye -- that has been available to the public since 1991. Why, I can't begin to guess.
Another slippery, slimy thing is that the FBI has signed contracts with some private data providers. Polygraphs [and] background investigations are being outsourced, and the Freedom of Information Act does not apply. If you say to the FBI, "I want the report that ChoicePoint furnished to you about me," they say to you, "Sorry, we can't give that to you. That's a private business record." This is really a fairly sinister development. And it's one that's profoundly un-American.
Given the amount of personal information out there and the fact that you aggregate it, does the public have reason to fear the misuse of personal data controlled by PallTech or other aggregators?
No, because frankly, we are more accountable than the U.S. government. You can sue us; you can subpoena us. You can hold us to task if we do something improper. Not so the U.S. government.
Can people protect their privacy by creating an anonymous Web presence?
If you think when you do a search on Google that because you're not logged in and your IP address is being assigned from a Verizon pool that you're anonymous, that's ridiculous.
So where are we going?
Privacy is dead. Get over it. You can't put the genie back in the bottle.
Dossier
Name: Steven Rambam
Title: Founder and CEO
Organization: Pallorium Inc.
Location: Brooklyn, N.Y.
Favorite technology: "E-mail with attachments. I don't think I've turned on my fax machine in years."
If he wasn't in this business, he'd probably be: A reporter.
Number of times he's been shot at on the job:"It's bad karma to count."
Favorite nonwork pastime: Anything on or near the water.
Philosophy in a nutshell: Do the right thing, no matter the personal cost.
Favorite vice: "I'm not going to tell you. I can assure you that it's not chocolate."
Favorite movie: "Ruggles of Red Gap, about a butler who is gambled away by a British lord and relocates with his new master to Montana. It's the most patriotically positive movie ever made about America."
Security


Privacy is dead. Get over it. You can't put the genie back in the bottle.

