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Post a Comment On: Jacqueline A. Morris

"Government Election data on a commercial site?"

3 Comments -

1 – 3 of 3
Anonymous Anonymous said...

i totally agree with your concerns about identity theft as i share them to... i've been trying to view the website for some days now and its been offline all the while... really need some answers from the EBC on this matter

10/01/2007 12:25:00 PM

Blogger Brendon said...

In addition to the online list, I've been to a few political party meetings where the executive members had a copy of the lists per polling division. The data comprised:

Name, Address, Telephone Number and Email address. I believe the telephone and email were collected by the party itself. However, there was too little concern for the safety of this information. It was being freely passed around, copied and shared with all present. No type of written policy at the very least was in place to dictate the appropriate usage of that information.

I suggested some basic methods of safeguarding that type of info, but we need a louder voice to ensure these currently minor concerns don't develop into the major problems other countries see i.e. identity theft.

10/01/2007 08:37:00 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The data is available to anyone who visits the EBC and is prepared to pay for it. The data so acquired does not include any unique identifiers - just Name, Address and Polling/Electoral districts.

Under the laws of T&T this is public data - in fact the EBC is required to publish this data in printed form prior to an election with even greater risk of misuse as the data can be tampered with by any individual. The printed lists often get defaced, torn etc. making it very difficult for citizens to find their names.

Perhaps the question should be asked why the EBC doesn't publish the list themselves since we now know that the technology is available and was used by more than 20,000 citizens in just one day.

4/07/2008 08:34:00 PM

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