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Yes, your home address is an example of a personally identifiable information. If someone has your physical address they can get the name of the residents and other personal information from public records.
Privacy of personal information refers to personal information, such as addresses, phone numbers, and other information that can identify a person being kept private.Privacyconcerns exist wherever personally identifiable information is collected and stored, in digital form or in another way. Improper or non-existent disclosure control can be the root cause for privacy issues. Data privacy issues can arise in response to information from a wide range of sources, such as:HealthcarerecordsFinancialinstitutions and transactionsResidence and geographic recordsEthnicityPrivacy BreachThe right of privacy has evolved to protect the ability of individuals to determine what sort of information about themselves is collected, and how that information is used.In many cases, this information is then provided to third parties for marketing purposes.Other entities, such as the federal government and financial institutions, also collect personal information.The threats of fraud and identity theft created by this flow of personal information have been an impetus for right of privacy legislation.
Public info -vs.- Private info - Drawing the line in the online world.Written by: Darity WesleyDarity Wesley has three definable types of data:Public Data [Compiled by the Government]Publicly Available Data [Compiled from membership directories, websites, newspaper articles, phone directories, etc.]Non-Public Data [AKA: Volunteered Information]
That would be considered personal information.
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true
Yes, your home address is an example of a personally identifiable information. If someone has your physical address they can get the name of the residents and other personal information from public records.
All of the Above
True. Personally identifiable information (PII) refers to information that can be used to identify or contact a specific individual, either on its own or in conjunction with other information. Examples include names, social security numbers, email addresses, and biometric data.
The system of records notice must be published 40 days before an executive agency may begin to collect personally identifiable information for a new records system.
All the above: SSN , Military rank, age
It must be published for 40 days before personal information can be collected for a new system of records.
Encrypting sensitive data to protect it from unauthorized access. Implementing strong password policies and multi-factor authentication. Regularly updating software and systems to prevent vulnerabilities. Limiting access to personal identifiable information to only those who need it for their job duties.
Many of the functions of a system of records are listed here:Provide for retrieval of records by the name of an individual or some other personal identifierContain only personally identifiable information that is relevant and necessary to accomplish a purpose of DoDProvide for notification of individuals that their information was possibly or actually lost, stolen, or compromised.
your coworker was teleworking when the agency e-mail system shut down. she had an urgent deadline so she sent you an encrypted set of records containing PII from her personal e-mail account. is this compliant with PII safeguarding procedures?
Officially rank by itself is not considered personal information. If a military person has a rank within a specific job code it is utilized by military personnel as an identifier but no other application that I know of exists.
It must be published for 40 days before personal information can be collected for a new system of records.