You bought a car ...
So you went to the Prefecture to pick up your registration card and your name, date of birth, address, and brand power of your car are in a file.
Until now, the file was not public data and your computers were still in the Prefecture that only the security forces (national police and gendarmerie) had access.
Under the Act, guidance and planning on the performance of Homeland Security (Loppsi2, an amendment adopted in the greatest silence April 29, 2009, will give the State an opportunity sell your personal information without asking, without asking your permission.
The two instigators, Gerard Longuet and Gerard Cornu, justify this amendment in terms of security to facilitate the recall of vehicles!
What is certain is that this amendment is primarily a gift to Private companies may well have targeted commercial operations.
But the amendment also raises ethical issues and safety of persons and property.
It is inconceivable that the state sell data without notifying the owner of a vehicle because it will not have the opportunity to object to disclosure of data.
But more importantly, the sale of these files with personal data goes against the same security is supposed to preserve Loppsi2. Indeed, nothing prevents these data do not, in the long term, in the hands of bad people.
I hope the legislators will realize that he will come back and drifts on the amendment.
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