Florida Makes $63M Selling Drivers' Info

Judge Says Info Selling Legal

by Jeff Weinsier
POSTED: Tuesday, July 19, 2011
UPDATED: 12:41 am EDT July 20, 2011

http://www.local10.com/news/28600374/detail.html

MIAMI -- The state of Florida made $63 million last year selling what many 
think is personal information.
Local 10 has learned the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles is 
selling people's names, addresses, dates of birth, a list of the vehicles they 
drive, and it's legal.
"Per federal mandate, there are companies that are entitled to this 
information. Insurance companies, for example, are entitled to this 
information. Employers are entitled to this information," said Ann Howard of 
the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
The state is currently selling this information to companies including Lexus 
Nexus and Shadow Soft. Those companies gather data on people and then sell that 
data. The companies must sign contracts with state claiming they won't harass 
people.
"This information cannot be sold to a company that plans to solicit business, 
such as companies that want you to come to their ice cream store or companies 
that want you to buy their vehicles," Howard said.
The state does not sell Social Security numbers or driver's license numbers, 
and a Florida judge said what the state is doing is legal.
No one outside the driver's license office in Lauderhill believed it.
"This is my own personal information, and I don't think it should be out 
there," said John Platt.
"You're kidding me," said Bebe Neice
"That's crazy. I didn't have a clue about it," said Mischka Peralto.
The state said selling the information is also a matter of public safety. There 
are 15.5 million registered drivers in Florida, and the state charges companies 
1 cent per electronic file. If a vehicle is recalled, the state of Florida has 
the latest and most current information on who owns that vehicle, so the 
manufacturer can notify the owners of the recall.
Only judges and law enforcement officers can request their personal information 
not be sold.
"If a company violates the Federal Driver Privacy Protection Act, they do face 
federal charges and federal fines," Howard said.
Copyright 2011 by Post-Newsweek Stations. All rights reserved. This material 
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten  or redistributed
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