The Securities and Exchange Commission is tracking the 61 percent of Americans who buy and sell stocks, from the trades they make to their personal identifying information. Some 3,000 SEC bureaucrats now have ready access to this database containing every single stock in the United States in a database called the Consolidated Audit Trail. Marc Wheat of Advancing American Freedom in The Washington Examiner writes: “The database is a disaster for the privacy of millions of people. In terms of the amount of information collected, only the National Security Agency’s data-collection program is larger, and that database is not focused on people. What is worse, these types of databases are not secure. In 2016, hackers made off with over $4 million by trading on at least 157 nonpublic earnings releases from the SEC’s very own Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system. “A commission that cannot protect a filing system that processes 1.7 million filings every year cannot be trusted to maintain the security of what will likely become a 100 million data point database. It is only a matter of time before it is breached, leaking people’s personal information to nefarious actors.” Comments are closed.
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