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Social Security Numbers Can Be Posted Online

Jaikumar Vijayan, Computerworld

Wednesday, August 27, 2008 12:00 PM PDT

Can a state government prohibit an individual from posting Social Security numbers online that were easily and legally obtained from government Web sites?

The answer, a federal judge in Virginia ruled last week, is a definite 'No,' at least for Betty "BJ" Ostergren, a privacy advocate who operates a Web site that posts Social Security numbers obtained from public records. Ostergren's postings are part of a campaign to show how easy it is to access very personal information on the Web.

In a memorandum opinion issued last Friday, Judge Robert Payne of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia ruled that it would be unconstitutional for the state of Virginia to force Ostergren to remove from her site Social Security numbers she legally obtained from public records. A memorandum opinion does not create precedent.

The Virginia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in June filed a lawsuit on behalf of Ostergren in Virginia's Hanover County. The lawsuit challenged the constitutionality of an amendment to Virginia's Personal Information Act, which forbids the dissemination of any records that Social Security numbers, no matter how the records were obtained. Violators are subject to fines of up to US$2,500 plus $1,000 in court costs for each Social Security number posted.

Ostergen, who has been working for several years to force Virginia county governments to redact Social Security numbers and other personal data from records posted online, contended in the suit that the law was passed specifically to curtail her campaign to publicize and end that practice.

Ostergren's Web site, The Virginia Watchdog.com, highlights privacy problems can result from the posting of unredacted public documents such as land and tax lien records posted on government Web sites. In recent years, she has chronicled dozens of cases in which local governments have inadvertently exposed Social Security numbers and other personal data on their Web sites, making them attractive targets for identity thieves.

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