3000 college students got credit cards. Does your school sell your materials?

National laws have made it clear that buying and selling personal information is illegal, but many institutions in society are still doing hidden operations. Our personal information may flow out through various channels, and it is still common to leak it from the school.

My uncle's brother took part in the senior high school entrance examination this year. Children don't like studying very much, so their grades are not very good. So he plans to find a technical secondary school to learn some skills. During the period before and after the senior high school entrance examination, he received calls from various middle schools, and we had not consulted any institutions before. So how did they get our information from these educational institutions that called? Obviously, it's from the school. As for who leaked our information from the school, there is really no way to find out.

Each of us has been exposed to various sales calls, and in the current sales calls, our names will be clearly known. At most, I can receive more than a dozen such calls a day, and I don't know from which channel my information flowed out and who I sold it to. Because we need to register all kinds of software and websites, we often need to fill in the phone number, and now we need SMS verification, so we can't write a fake number at all. This has also led to our personal information being mastered by many people. Sometimes everyone's information will even be resold many times, becoming a tool for others to promote products, and even leaving loopholes for fraud agencies. It is understood that many detailed personal data can be sold for dozens of pieces online, and we really have no privacy at all.

Every school will gather a large number of students, and the information of these students will be mastered by the school. However, there are many people in schools who have access to this information and lack the necessary confidentiality measures. Many schools will publicly disclose students' information in the name of cooperation.

For example, the school gave students' information to the bank and gave each student a credit card. The information of 3,000 college students was leaked collectively. If we can find out the facts and confirm the existence of interest transactions, this can be sentenced through criminal law.

Banks and educational institutions attach great importance to students' information collection, because in these institutions, there are very clear data requirements for business personnel, and a certain amount of data must be completed in order to get paid. Banks, on the other hand, determine their performance by the number of cards opened, so many business personnel will do whatever it takes to obtain data in order to meet their performance requirements. However, it is still difficult to obtain a large amount of personal information by personal efforts, so school resources will become the focus of these people's attention. Driven by interests, some people will naturally ignore the legal provisions and sell their personal information. If this kind of collective disclosure of personal information is not too obvious, it is really difficult to find this kind of thing, and it is difficult to completely eradicate it simply by relying on legal supervision.