The Office of Personnel Management released a new data strategy on Wednesday with a slew of data-related goals, including the creation of a "360-view" o.
clearly some of those still, both sides are ready, the change is it will require everyone, us citizens are not coming in and leaving the country to submit themselves to facial recognition scanning. i get it. when you are on the overnight flight coming back from thailand, lasting you want to do is submit to one of these scannings you are just thinking about getting off the plane and going home. the big question for us is how dhs and the government largely will protect this sort of data. we ve seen big data breaches in recent history including the opm data breach, there was an issue with license plate readers at the border. that s where we want the data we collect to keep us safe from threats, not to make other threats. the statement on the use of facial recognition actually says comparison technology is used because it seamlessly integrates
what s that about? chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge live in d.c. on this. catherine, how could they use this information? reporter: well, bill, fox news confirmed the same chinese entity behind opm was also behind the theft of records from at least two health care providers this year, anthem and care first. when you combine security clearance applications from opm and personal information in health care file, you have complete profile of government employees who work in national security. leading i.t. company analyzing fallout the data is stored by chinese operatives, for targeting, blackmailing, recruitment purposes what they call a facebook much everything. the company warns that the opm data breach is likely only tip of the iceberg as u.s. government and private industry interests are under constant cyberattack by china and russia. the chinese are aggregating all the personal information not just on the 21 million people in the opm breach but every