From: peb@PROCASE.COM (Paul Baclace)
To: tcmay@netcom.com
Message Hash: 0ad120c42f97d9578dd40a0013759c85e15e0cf3527d96c5c5024b0193533412
Message ID: <9308051754.AA01156@banff.procase.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-08-05 17:55:22 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 5 Aug 93 10:55:22 PDT
From: peb@PROCASE.COM (Paul Baclace)
Date: Thu, 5 Aug 93 10:55:22 PDT
To: tcmay@netcom.com
Subject: Re: Offshore Data Havens and Services
Message-ID: <9308051754.AA01156@banff.procase.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
>(For you worried parents out there who worry about Junior calling these
I recently heard about a married adult who would call some sex line
uncontrollably...so apparently it is possible for some people to
become addicted to a phone number--the blocking isn't just for concerned
parents! What a surprise (to me).
>* when will the first "personal data" agencies appear, which offer
Yesterday on American Public Radio (used to be called NPR?) reported
that the IRS recently busted 300 or so of their employees for accessing
tax returns of relatives, famous people, etc. They noted that this
information was also being sold to lawyers, private investigators, and
market researchers. The IRS even stated that they cannot control the
problem since 56,000 employees have access to the data. The black
market of tax information is doing quite fine...
>landlords
A database already exists for the purpose of identifying defaulting renters.
I'd like to create a reverse one that tracks landlords who never make repairs
or charge excessive cleaning fees.
>preexisting medical conditions databases
This kinda thing irks me since is a policy choice as to how preexisting
conditions are covered. Since I've changed jobs often (startups, etc.),
it can be a real hassle every time they try to use this to weasle out of
a claim. (My wife just had a checkup, everything is fine, and they
want all kinds of information released to them to determine whether there
was a preexisting condition even though she is being treated for nothing
at all!) The clause varies from company to company considerably and is
archaic since insurance should be for the individual, not subsidized and
controlled by group policies...
>Crypto anarchy is gonna change the world!
The race is on.
Paul E. Baclace
peb@procase.com
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1993-08-05 (Thu, 5 Aug 93 10:55:22 PDT) - Re: Offshore Data Havens and Services - peb@PROCASE.COM (Paul Baclace)