mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-26 15:59:29 -05:00
287 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
287 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Archive-Name: ssn-privacy
|
|
|
|
|
|
What to do when they ask for your Social Security Number
|
|
|
|
by Chris Hibbert
|
|
|
|
Computer Professionals
|
|
for Social Responsibility
|
|
|
|
|
|
Many people are concerned about the number of organizations asking for their
|
|
Social Security Numbers. They worry about invasions of privacy and the
|
|
oppressive feeling of being treated as just a number. Unfortunately, I
|
|
can't offer any hope about the dehumanizing effects of identifying you with
|
|
your numbers. I *can* try to help you keep your Social Security Number from
|
|
being used as a tool in the invasion of your privacy.
|
|
|
|
Surprisingly, government agencies are reasonably easy to deal with; private
|
|
organizations are much more troublesome. Federal law restricts the agencies
|
|
at all levels of government that can demand your number and a fairly
|
|
complete disclosure is required even if its use is voluntary. There are no
|
|
comparable Federal laws restricting the uses non-government organizations
|
|
can make of it, or compelling them to tell you anything about their plans.
|
|
Some states have recently regulations on collection of SSNs by private
|
|
|
|
|
entities. With private institutions, your main recourse is refusing to do
|
|
|
|
|
business with anyone whose terms you don't like.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Short History
|
|
|
|
Social Security numbers were introduced by the Social Security Act of 1935.
|
|
They were originally intended to be used only by the social security
|
|
program, and public assurances were given at the time that use would be
|
|
strictly limited. In 1943 Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9397 which
|
|
required federal agencies to use the number when creating new record-keeping
|
|
systems. In 1961 the IRS began to use it as a taxpayer ID number. The
|
|
Privacy Act of 1974 required authorization for government agencies to use
|
|
SSNs in their data bases and required disclosures (detailed below) when
|
|
government agencies request the number. Agencies which were already using
|
|
SSN as an identifier before January 1, 1975 were allowed to continue using
|
|
it. The Tax Reform Act of 1976 gave authority to state or local tax,
|
|
welfare, driver's license, or motor vehicle registration authorities to use
|
|
the number in order to establish identities. The Privacy Protection Study
|
|
Commission of 1977 recommended that the Executive Order be repealed after
|
|
some agencies referred to it as their authorization to use SSNs. I don't
|
|
know whether it was repealed, but that practice has stopped.
|
|
|
|
Several states use the SSN as a driver's license number, while others record
|
|
it on applications and store it in their database. Some states that
|
|
routinely use it on the license will make up another number if you insist.
|
|
According to the terms of the Privacy Act, any that have a space for it on
|
|
the application forms should have a disclosure notice. Many don't, and
|
|
until someone takes them to court, they aren't likely to change. (Though
|
|
New York recently agreed to start adding the notice on the basis of a letter
|
|
written by a reader of this blurb.)
|
|
|
|
The Privacy Act of 1974 (5 USC 552a) requires that any federal, state, or
|
|
local government agency that requests your Social Security Number has to
|
|
tell you four things:
|
|
|
|
1: Whether disclosure of your Social Security Number is required or
|
|
optional,
|
|
|
|
2: What law authorizes them to ask for your Social Security Number,
|
|
|
|
3: How your Social Security Number will be used if you give it to them,
|
|
and
|
|
|
|
4: The consequences of failure to provide an SSN.
|
|
|
|
In addition, the Act says that only Federal law can make use of the Social
|
|
Security Number mandatory. So anytime you're dealing with a government
|
|
institution and you're asked for your Social Security Number, just look for
|
|
the Privacy Act Statement. If there isn't one, complain and don't give your
|
|
number. If the statement is present, read it. If it says giving your
|
|
Social Security Number is voluntary, you'll have to decide for yourself
|
|
whether to fill in the number.
|
|
|
|
Private Organizations
|
|
|
|
The guidelines for dealing with non-governmental institutions are much more
|
|
tenuous. Most of the time private organizations that request your Social
|
|
Security Number can get by quite well without your number, and if you can
|
|
find the right person to negotiate with, they'll willingly admit it. The
|
|
problem is finding that right person. The person behind the counter is
|
|
often told no more than "get the customers to fill out the form completely."
|
|
|
|
Most of the time, you can convince them to use some other number. Usually
|
|
the simplest way to refuse to give your Social Security Number is simply to
|
|
leave the appropriate space blank. One of the times when this isn't a
|
|
strong enough statement of your desire to conceal your number is when
|
|
dealing with institutions which have direct contact with your employer.
|
|
Most employers have no policy against revealing your Social Security Number;
|
|
they apparently believe that it must have been an unintentional slip that
|
|
you didn't give out your SSN.
|
|
|
|
Public utilities (gas, electric, phone, etc.) are considered to be private
|
|
organizations under the laws regulating SSNs. Most of the time they ask for
|
|
an SSN, and aren't prohibited from asking for it, but they'll usually relent
|
|
if you insist. Ask to speak to a supervisor, insist that they document a
|
|
corporate policy requiring it, ask about alternatives, ask why they need it
|
|
and suggest alternatives.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lenders and Borrowers (those who send reports to the IRS)
|
|
|
|
Banks and credit card issuers and various others are required by the IRS to
|
|
report the SSNs of account holders to whom they pay interest or when they
|
|
charge interest and report it to the IRS. If you don't tell them your
|
|
number you will probably either be refused an account or be charged a
|
|
penalty such as withholding of taxes on your interest.
|
|
|
|
Many Banks, Brokerages, and other financial institutions have started
|
|
implementing automated systems to let you check your balance. All too often,
|
|
they are using SSNs as the PIN that lets you get access to your personal
|
|
account information. If your bank does this to you, write them a letter
|
|
pointing out how many of the people you have financial business with know
|
|
your SSN. Ask them to change your PIN, and if you feel like doing a good
|
|
deed, ask them to stop using the SSN as a default identifier. Some
|
|
customers will believe that there's some security in it, and be
|
|
insufficiently protective of their account numbers.
|
|
|
|
When buying (and possibly refinancing) a house, most banks will now ask for
|
|
your Social Security Number on the Deed of Trust. This is because the
|
|
Federal National Mortgage Association recently started requiring it. The
|
|
fine print in their regulation admits that some consumers won't want to give
|
|
their number, and allows banks to leave it out when pressed. [It first
|
|
recommends getting it on the loan note, but then admits that it's already on
|
|
various other forms that are a required part of the package, so they already
|
|
know it. The Deed is a public document, so there are good reasons to refuse
|
|
to put it there, even though all parties to the agreement already have
|
|
access to your number.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Insurers, Hospitals, Doctors
|
|
|
|
No laws require medical service providers to use your Social Security Number
|
|
as an ID number (except for Medicare, Medicaid, etc.) They often use it
|
|
because it's convenient or because your employer uses it to certify
|
|
employees to its groups health plan. In the latter case, you have to get
|
|
your employer to change their policies. Often, the people who work in
|
|
personnel assume that the employer or insurance company requires use of the
|
|
SSN when that's not really the case. When my current employer asked for my
|
|
SSN for an insurance form, I asked them to try to find out if they had to
|
|
use it. After a week they reported that the insurance company had gone
|
|
along with my request and told me what number to use. Blood banks also ask
|
|
for the number but are willing to do without if pressed on the issue. After
|
|
I asked politely and persistently, the blood bank I go to agreed that they
|
|
didn't have any use for the number. They've now expunged my SSN from their
|
|
database, and they seem to have taught their receptionists not to request
|
|
the number.
|
|
|
|
Most insurance companies share access to old claims through the Medical
|
|
Information Bureau. If your insurance company uses your SSN, other
|
|
insurance companies will have a much easier time finding out about your
|
|
medical history. You can get a copy of the file MIB keeps on you by writing
|
|
to Medical Information Bureau, P.O. Box 105, Essex Station, Boston, MA
|
|
02112. Their phone number is (617)426-3660.
|
|
|
|
If an insurance agent asks for your Social Security Number in order to
|
|
"check your credit", point out that the contract is invalid if your check
|
|
bounces or your payment is late. They don't need to know what your credit
|
|
is like, just whether you've paid them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Children
|
|
|
|
The Family Support Act of 1988 (42 USC 1305, 607, and 602) apparently
|
|
requires states to require parents to give their Social Security Numbers in
|
|
order to get a birth certificate issued for a newborn. The law allows the
|
|
requirement to be waived for "good cause", but there's no indication of what
|
|
may qualify.
|
|
|
|
The IRS requires taxpayers to report SSNs for dependents over one year of
|
|
age, but the requirement can be avoided if you're prepared to document the
|
|
existence of the child by other means if challenged. The law on this can be
|
|
found at 26 USC 6109.
|
|
|
|
Universities and Colleges
|
|
|
|
Universities that accept federal funds are subject to the Family Educational
|
|
Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (the "Buckley Amendment"), which prohibits
|
|
them from giving out personal information on students withses, and phone
|
|
numbers, and another exception for release of
|
|
information to the parents of minors. There is no exception for Social
|
|
Security Numbers, so covered Universities aren't allowed to reveal students'
|
|
numbers without their permission. In addition, state universities are bound
|
|
by the requirements of the Privacy Act, which requires them to provide the
|
|
disclosures mentioned above. If urity Numbers is a problem
|
|
|
|
The Social Security Number doesn't work well as an identifier for several
|
|
reasons. The first reason is that it isn't at all secure; if someone makes
|
|
up a nine-digit number, it's quite likely that they've picked a number that
|
|
is assigned to someone. There are quite a few reasons why people would make
|
|
up a number: to hide their identity or the fact that they're dohat it makes it
|
|
hard to control access to personal information. Even assuming you want
|
|
someone to be able to find out some things about you, there's no reason to
|
|
believe that you want to make all records concerning yourself available.
|
|
When multiple record systems are all keyed by the same identifier, and all
|
|
are intended to be easily accessible to some users, it becomes difficult to
|
|
allow sh the passage of the Immigration reform law. While making up a number
|
|
is usually good enough to fool the public library, employers submit the number
|
|
to the IRS, which cross checks with its own and SSA's records. Because of the
|
|
checks, illegal workers need to know what name goes with the number so they
|
|
won't be caught as quickly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
What you can do to protect your number
|
|
|
|
tion and expecting them to
|
|
understand and cooperate. If that doesn't work, there are several more
|
|
things to try:
|
|
|
|
1: Talk to people higher up in the organization. This often works
|
|
simply because the organization has a standard way of dealing
|
|
with requests not to use the SSN, and the first person you deal
|
|
with just hasn't been around long enough to know what it is.
|
|
o get back to your supervisor and
|
|
affect your job.
|
|
|
|
3: Threaten to complain to a consumer affairs bureau. Most newspapers
|
|
can get a quick response. Ask for their "Action Line" or
|
|
equivalent. If you're dealing with a local government agency,
|
|
look in the state or local government section of the phone book
|
|
under "consumer affairs." If it's a federal lp.
|
|
|
|
4: Insist that they document a corporate policy requiring the number.
|
|
When someone can't find a written policy or doesn't want to
|
|
push hard enough to get it, they'll often realize that they
|
|
don't know what the policy is, and they've just been following
|
|
tradition.
|
|
|
|
5: Ask what they need it for and suggest alternatives. If you're
|
|
talking to someyour number in order to have a
|
|
continuing relationship, you can choose to ignore the request
|
|
in hopes that they'll forget or find another solution before
|
|
you get tired of the interruption.
|
|
|
|
If someone absolutely insists on getting your Social Security Number, you
|
|
may want to give a fake number. There is no legal penalty as long as you're
|
|
not doing it to get somethinds of new wallets sold in the 40's and 50's. It's
|
|
been used so widely that both the IRS and SSA recognize it immediately as
|
|
bogus, while most clerks haven't heard of it.
|
|
|
|
There are several prefixes that have never been assigned, and which
|
|
therefore don't conflict with anyone's real number. They include the
|
|
following patterns:
|
|
|
|
1. Any field all zeroes (no field of zeroes is ever assigneut some have been
|
|
assigned to organizations and for other special purposes. The Social Security
|
|
Administration recommends that people showing Social Security cards in
|
|
advertisements use numbers in the range 987-65-4320 through 987-65-4329.
|
|
|
|
If you're designing a database, and want to use numbers other than Social
|
|
Security Numbers, you'd be better off generating numbers that are shorter
|
|
thanepending on these unused patterns.
|
|
|
|
The Social Security Administration recommends that you request a copy of
|
|
your file from them every few years to make sure that your records are
|
|
correct (your income and "contributions" are being recorded for you, and no
|
|
one else's are.) As a result of a recent court case, the SSA has agreed to
|
|
accept corrections of errors when there isn't any contradictorined two legal
|
|
cases concerning Social Security Numbers and privacy. One of them challenged
|
|
the IRS practice of printing Social Security Numbers on mailing labels when
|
|
they send out tax forms and related correspondence. The other challenged
|
|
Virginia's requirement of a Social Security Number in order to register to
|
|
vote.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Peter Zilahy Ingerman filed suit against the IRS in Federal Distr. CPSR
|
|
plans to appeal.
|
|
|
|
The Virginia case was filed by a resident of the state who refused to supply
|
|
a Social Security Number when registering to vote. When the registrar
|
|
refused to accept his registration, he filed suit. He is also challenging
|
|
the state of Virginia on two other bases: the registration form apparently
|
|
lacked a Privacy Act notice, and the voter lists the state publishes id them
|
|
to me at:
|
|
Chris Hibbert
|
|
hibbert@xanadu.com or Xanadu Operating Company
|
|
550 California Ave, Suite 101
|
|
Palo Alto, CA 94306
|
|
|
|
|