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    What Stays in Vegas

    Page 34
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      gathered by privacy companies, 227–229

      historical documents for genealogy, 61–62

      mug shots, 72–74, 137–144, 149–155

      purchased from government agencies, 62–63, 65, 67

      sold by Intelius, 57–58

      used by casinos, 49

      Public shaming on the Internet, 151, 152, 243, 246

      Publishers Clearing House, 242

      Qiy.nl, 234

      Quarri’s myPOQ, 262

      R&R Partners, 243

      Racial data. See Ethnic and racial group targeting

      Raider, Al, 261

      Rain Man movie, 36

      Ramer, Jorey, 186

      Rapleaf, 174

      Rasushi.com, 162

      Rat Pack, 7, 17, 21

      Real-time bidding (RTB), 262

      Real-time casino marketing (RTCM), 193

      Recession. See Financial crisis of 2008

      Redford, Robert, 36

      Reidentified personal data, 102–108, 109, 111–113, 248

      Reno, Nevada, 10, 23, 78

      Reputation.com

      raises venture capital, 232

      removes, obscures, damaging data/reviews, 226–229, 248, 267

      vault opening delayed, 234

      Reputationdefender.com, 227

      Reuters, 3

      Reversephonedetective.com, 54–55, 57, 59, 68

      Reviews, negative and damaging, 116–117, 226, 229

      Revolution.com, 232

      Rhodes, Vera, 3–4

      Rio Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, 13(fig)

      Rosenthal, Frank “Lefty,” 7, 43, 132

      Rowland, Alex, 168, 169

      Roy, Paola, 138–139, 143, 150

      Ruby, Daniel, 187

      Russell, Ryan, 142, 150, 153

      Sadh, Devyani, 173

      Sahara Hotel and Casino, 17

      Salmon, Walter, 12, 188–189

      San Diego, California, 70–72, 178

      San Francisco, California, 3, 31, 41, 52, 85, 167–169, 196

      Sands Hotel, 17, 21

      Santa Cruz, California, 70

      Saracevic, Edin, 230–232, 233(fig)

      Sarajevo, 230, 231

      Satre, Phil, 11–12, 14, 26–27

      Saturday Night Live TV program, 41

      Schlesinger, Len, 9

      Scholarships.com, 240–241

      Schwartz, David, 217

      Search engines, 70, 155, 264–265

      Sears/Sears, Roebuck and Company, 78, 159

      Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), 83

      Securities fraud, 60

      Security systems

      in casinos, 123–133, 183–185, 201–202

      hunting for patterns in social networks, 98–99, 134–136

      mobile communications, email, search engines, 262–265

      See also Surveillance

      Segmenting data lists

      behavior segments, 195

      cultural segments, 89

      for direct marketing, 76

      ethnic, racial, religious, segments, 86

      for fundraising, 79

      geographically, 217–218

      September 11, 2001 attacks, 1–2, 57

      Serling, Rod, 21

      Seven Stars tier of Caesars’ Total Rewards, 30, 176, 178, 193, 194, 196

      Sex offender registries, 70, 140, 153

      Sexual orientation unmasked from personal data, 99–101, 111, 113, 241, 248

      Sgrouples, 265

      Shackelford, Lynwood, 87

      Shaming. See Public shaming on the Internet

      Shaukat, Tariq, 178, 209–213

      Shavell, Rob, 261

      ShazzleMail, 264, 265

      Shepherd, Dave, 131–132

      Shmatikov, Vitaly, 109–111, 260

      Shopping, 244, 247

      online, 264

      shoppers tracked electronically, 132, 188

      traditional and in-store, 78, 267

      Siegel, Bugsy, 7, 21

      Sightline Payments, 184–185

      Silent Circle, 264

      Silicon Valley, 52–54, 66, 169, 226–227

      Silver Nugget Casino, 133–134

      Simmons, Meagan, 73

      Simpson, O. J., 138

      Sinatra, Frank, 17, 21, 43, 47, 137–138

      Sinisi, Karen, 88, 89

      Six Degrees to Harry Lewis site, 98

      60 Minutes II TV program, 83

      Skype, 52, 260

      Slot machines

      background, as casinos’ moneymakers, 22–23

      data gathering, tracking, of players, 25–26, 33–34, 189–190

      future personalization, 189

      with movie/television themes, 4, 23, 38

      odds, 16–17, 175

      Slotomania, 189

      Smart phones. See Cell phones; GPS tracking

      Smith, Michael (imaginary Instant Checkmate spokesperson), 122

      Snowden, Edward, 225, 264

      Social networks, 59, 97–99, 101, 134–136, 242–243, 265. See also Facebook; Twitter

      Social Security numbers available to data brokers, 47, 48, 65, 80, 219, 245, 268

      Software Freedom Law Center, 260

      The Sopranos TV program, 37

      South Africa, 25, 174

      South Korea, 246

      Southwest Airlines, 9–10

      Soviet Communism, 99–100, 110, 157, 231

      Spacey, Kevin, 128

      Spilotro, Anthony, 43, 44

      Spokeo, 49, 59, 226, 239

      Spy magazine, 162

      Stanford University, 49, 53, 56, 59

      Stardust Hotel and Casino, 17

      Startpage, 264–265

      Stasi files in East Germany, ix–xiii, 219, 222, 253

      State Farm insurance, 144

      Station Casinos, 184

      Stillwell, David, 99

      Stirista, 85, 87–89

      Stitelman, Ori, 163–166

      Sun City Casino, South Africa, 25

      Sunshine Test, 213–214, 251

      SurfEasy, 262, 265

      Surfraw, 260

      Surveillance

      of casino customers, 123–126, 201–202

      of casino staff, 133–134, 183–184

      Surveys revealing personal data. See Online surveys; Personal Genome Project

      Suther, Tim, 81, 90, 252–253

      Sweeney, Latanya, 102–108

      Table games, 22, 34–35

      Taiwan, 246

      Tang, Harrison, 49, 239

      Telemarketing, 56, 163, 246

      Telephone number searches, 54, 65

      TextSecure, 265

      T5 Healthy Living, 84

      Therisinghollywood.com, 164

      Thieves casinos want to exclude, 125, 127, 131, 134–135

      Third-party affiliate advertisers, contractors, 71–72, 122

      Third-party cookies, 160, 261

      Third-party data, 40, 210–212, 219

      Thunderbird Hotel, 32

      Ticketmaster, 212

      Time Warner Cable, 86

      Tinsley, Jeff, 49–50, 60

      TMZ.com, 161(fig)

      Tobacco, 76, 78, 79, 201

      Tony Soprano character, 36–37

      Tor, 263

      Total Recall: How the E-Memory Revolution . . . (Bell), 268

      Total Rewards credit card, 183

      Total Rewards loyalty program, 26(fig), 28(fig), 92(fig)

      data gathered from members, 33–34, 37

      data not sold to others, 40, 213

      exemplified by customer Kostel, 37–40

      mistargeted offers, 217

      popularity at new Horseshoe Cincinnati, 206–207

      revamped by Kanter, 93–94, 176–179

      TPG Capital, 91

      Tracking (online), 110–112, 132, 161–163. See also GPS tracking; Shopping

      Tracking of gamblers by casinos, 26, 33–36, 174–175, 181

      TrackMeNot, 260

      Tracy, Spencer, 42

      TransUnion, 63, 266

      Turkewitz, Eric, 151

      21 movie, 128–129

      The Twilight Zone TV p
    rogram, 21, 22–23, 35

      Twitter, 161, 242, 254

      Tyson, Mike, 48

      Ubuntu, 265

      UCLA, 196

      United Nations, 231

      University of California, Berkeley, 164–165

      University of California, Santa Cruz, 70

      University of Cambridge, 58, 99

      University of Chicago, 27

      University of Illinois, 145, 148

      University of Maryland, 261

      University of Nevada Center for Gaming Research, 217

      University of Southern California, 51

      University of Texas, 109, 260

      University Painters, 75–76, 93

      Unpublished phone numbers, 54, 65

      Unspyable, 262

      Upgradevisits.com, 168

      US Congress, 72–73, 244, 246

      US Department of Education, 234

      US Department of Homeland Security, 242, 246

      US government. See under specific government-related entries

      US Internal Revenue Service, 162

      US National Security Agency (NSA), 220, 264

      US Postal Service (USPS) address records, 65, 84, 173

      Vaughan, Sarah, 32

      Venetian Resort Hotel and Casino, 17, 132, 216

      Vernon, Cheryl, 245

      Vietnam, 76, 88, 246

      Visa, 266

      Voice recognition, 189

      VoIP (voice over Internet protocol), 65, 86

      Voter registration records, 44, 86, 102, 104

      VPN (virtual private network), 262, 265

      W3m web browser, 260

      Wall Street Journal, 203, 252

      Wallace, David Foster, 197

      Walsh, John, 153

      Walsh, Kit, 263

      Walt Disney Company, 219

      Warranty cards, 80, 82, 250

      Warsaw Marriott Hotel, 10

      Washington, DC, 58, 78, 231, 232, 233(fig)

      Washington Suburban Press Network, 87

      Web beacons, 159–160, 162

      Weld, William, 102

      Wellhabits.com, 167

      Wesleyan University, 7, 75, 93

      What Happens Here, Stays Here ad campaign, 3, 243–244

      Wheel of Fortune, 4, 22, 110

      WhisperSystems, 265

      White Ops, 169–170

      WhiteHat Aviator, 262

      Whiting, Ted, 133, 136

      Willis, Edward, 207

      WINet (Winners Information Network), 27

      Wired.com, 55

      Womenshealthspace.com, 164

      Woolley, Linda, 85

      Wunderman, Lester, 237–238

      Wynn, Steve, 7–8, 48, 214–216

      Wynn Resorts, 49, 90

      Yahoo ads, 51, 54, 66, 162

      Yelp listing for Instant Checkmate, 115–117, 122

      YouTube, 254

      Yugoslavia, 230

      Zane, Mike, 242

      Zennström, Niklas, 52

      Zeta-Jones, Catherine, 36

      ZIP codes as personal data, 86–87, 102, 106–107, 242, 247

      ZIP+4, 173

      Zuckerberg, Mark, 55–56, 98, 118, 136

      PHOTO BY CLARISSA TANNER

      Adam Tanner writes about the business of personal data. He is a fellow at the Institute for Quantitative Social Science at Harvard University and was previously a Nieman fellow there. Tanner has worked for Reuters News Agency as Balkans bureau chief (based in Belgrade, Serbia), as well as San Francisco bureau chief, and has had previous postings in Berlin, Moscow, and Washington, DC. He also contributes to Forbes and other magazines.

      PublicAffairs is a publishing house founded in 1997. It is a tribute to the standards, values, and flair of three persons who have served as mentors to countless reporters, writers, editors, and book people of all kinds, including me.

      I. F. STONE, proprietor of I. F. Stone’s Weekly, combined a commitment to the First Amendment with entrepreneurial zeal and reporting skill and became one of the great independent journalists in American history. At the age of eighty, Izzy published The Trial of Socrates, which was a national bestseller. He wrote the book after he taught himself ancient Greek.

      BENJAMIN C. BRADLEE was for nearly thirty years the charismatic editorial leader of The Washington Post. It was Ben who gave the Post the range and courage to pursue such historic issues as Watergate. He supported his reporters with a tenacity that made them fearless and it is no accident that so many became authors of influential, best-selling books.

      ROBERT L. BERNSTEIN, the chief executive of Random House for more than a quarter century, guided one of the nation’s premier publishing houses. Bob was personally responsible for many books of political dissent and argument that challenged tyranny around the globe. He is also the founder and longtime chair of Human Rights Watch, one of the most respected human rights organizations in the world.

      •••

      For fifty years, the banner of Public Affairs Press was carried by its owner Morris B. Schnapper, who published Gandhi, Nasser, Toynbee, Truman, and about 1,500 other authors. In 1983, Schnapper was described by The Washington Post as “a redoubtable gadfly.” His legacy will endure in the books to come.

      Peter Osnos, Founder and Editor-at-Large

     

     

     



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