Online Data Gets Personal: Cell Phone Records for Sale home
By
Jonathan Krim
Washington Post Staff
Writer
Friday, July 8, 2005; Page D01
They're
not just after your credit card or Social Security numbers.
Fueled
by the ease of online commerce, snoops are on the trail of other personal
information, too. One of the hottest markets: records of phone calls,
especially from cell phones.
The only place cell phone
call records are kept is with the phone companies.
(By Bebeto Matthews -- Associated Press)
A tool
long used by law enforcement and private investigators to help locate
criminals or debt-skippers, phone records are a part of the sea of
personal data routinely bought and sold online in an Internet-driven,
I-can-find-out-anything-about-you world. Legal experts say many of
the methods for acquiring such information are illegal, but they receive
scant attention from authorities.
Think your
mate is cheating? For $110, Locatecell.com will provide you with the
outgoing calls from his or her cell phone for the last billing cycle,
up to 100 calls. All you need to supply is the name, address and the
number for the phone you want to trace. Order online, and get results
within hours.
Carlos
F. Anderson, a licensed private investigator in Florida, offers a
similar service for $165, for all major telephone carriers.
"This report
provides all the calls with dates, times, and duration on the billing
statement," according to Anderson's Web site, which adds, "Incoming
Calls and Call Location are provided if available."
Learning
who someone talked to on the phone cannot enable the kind of financial
fraud made easier when a Social Security or credit card number is
purloined. Instead, privacy advocates say, the intrusion is more personal.
"This is
a person's associations," said Daniel J. Solove, a George Washington
University Law School professor who specializes in privacy issues.
"Who their physicians are, are they seeing a psychiatrist, companies
they do business with . . . it's a real wealth of data to find out
the people that a person interacts with."
Such records
could be used by criminals, such as stalkers or abusive spouses trying
to find victims.
Unlike
Social Security numbers, which are on many public documents that have
been scooped up for years by data brokers, the only repository of
telephone call records is the phone companies.
Wireless
carriers say they are aware that unauthorized people seek to get their
customers' call records and sell them, but the companies say they
take steps to prevent it.
"There
are probably 100 such sites" known to security officials at Verizon
Wireless that offer to sell phone records, said Jeffrey Nelson, a
company spokesman, who said Verizon is always trying to respond to
abusive practices. He said that the company views all such activity
as illegal and that "we have historically, and will continue to, change
policies to reflect the changing nature of criminal activity," though
he declined to be specific