What should the IRS do to protect our personal information?
It’s a week before Tax Day. Do you know where your tax information is?
My return is done. My refund is pocketed. My debts are lower.
But my personal information — Social Security numbers for myself and my family, my income, my deductions, my charitable contributions — they’re all sitting in a computer somewhere in the databanks of the Internal Revenue Service.
And, says this story by the Associated Press:
Treasury watchdogs said Monday that poor controls over IRS computers could allow a disgruntled employee, agency contractor or outside hacker to steal taxpayers’ confidential information.
Indeed, a hacker might even “gain full control of the IRS network,” said a report Monday [.pdf file] from the office of the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.
Really?
And what should the government be doing about that, kind TOTD folks? Do the recommendations in the report go far enough? Or do you really even worry about stuff like this?


Kurt is the director of social media for the Post-Dispatch, where he has worked since August 2002. He's been a journalist since 1982, covering municipal government, courts, education and two hurricanes as a reporter before becoming an editor.
Your income and deductions, I certainly would not worry about. Your social security numbers are everywhere already. Do you trust your employer’s, bank’s and doctor’s databases any more than you trust the IRS?
Computer databases are computers at the access of any employee or potential hacker any where at anytime. Not much you can do about it. That’s just today’s technology you have to live with today—it goes with the territory.