How safe is your data with tap-and-go subway payments?

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With the MTA's OMNY payment system for subways and buses about to complete its takeover next year, making the MetroCard a thing of the past, the technical upgrade in our lives to a real-time system tracking our every commuting move has some civil rights and privacy groups sounding the alarm that our freedom is at risk.

and buses about to complete its takeover next year, making the MetroCard a thing of the past, the technical upgrade in our lives to a real-time system tracking our every commuting move has some civil rights and privacy groups sounding the alarm that our freedom is at risk.has been sharing information with the NYPD when investigators need clues on a suspect's identity or for help on a case.

While prepaid OMNY cards will be available, the flow of information between the MTA and outside agencies is what critics are worried about. For instance, allowing ICE agents to access the system. "We can't claim to be a sanctuary city and have protections for those targeted by ICE and still have no clear protections on how this data is flowing," Albert Fox Cahn, the executive director of the civil rights and privacy group Surveillance Technology Oversight Project. "There's so much risk for abuse, whether it's tracking New Yorkers for their political beliefs, tracking them for their religion, or tracking anyone else who falls into disfavor.

The MTA said riders can purchase OMNY cards with cash and do not have to disclose any private information at all. Selling data to third parties is not permitted and location information collected when straphangers tap in is not shared with credit card companies, the MTA added.

 

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