HOME

Archive for the ‘Name Matching’ Category

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-12-05

Sunday, December 5th, 2010

[Post from Infoglide] The Word is (Finally) Getting Out

“Immediately after the Christmas bomber incident in 2009, we highlighted the positive role that broader deployment of (id)entity resolution software could play in preventing terrorist actions. That thought was seconded this week in a piece published by the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC) entitled ‘Better data analysis for a safer world’…”

NaturalNews.com: Louisiana sues Big Pharma for Medicaid fraud

“According to the same official statement, Louisiana doled out more than $850 million in taxpayer funds to drug companies to pay for drugs between 1991 and 2009. But a significant portion of this amount was most likely fraudulent because of the billing scheme drug companies utilize to get reimbursed. The way it works is drug companies report what are called the Average Wholesale Prices (AWPs) for drugs, and are subsequently reimbursed by state Medicaid programs for these amounts. But the lawsuit alleges that drug companies were marking up these costs as high as 6000 percent above actual costs.”

The Globe and Mail: Membership cards touted as solution to lottery fraud

“Last month a father and son who worked at Burlington store were charged, along with another family member, with stealing a $12.5-million Super 7 jackpot in 2003. The case has not yet come to trial. Mr. Vikoren said that for membership cards to ensure consumer protection, people need to keep their card safe.”

ChrisAroundTheWorld.com: TSA Airport Security: Is it time for a Trusted Traveler biometric program?

“But the whole thing made me think about whether the TSA could institute a ‘trusted traveler’ program that allows vetted frequent flyers easier access through security. It’s an idea supported by the U.S. Travel Association. The organization, which promotes the interests of the travel industry, has called upon the government to consider such a measure, especially because the Department of Homeland Security is already working with airlines and online reservation systems on Secure Flight, where manifests of  domestic and inbound passengers are checked against government watch lists.”

The Word is (Finally) Getting Out

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

By Mike Betron, Infoglide Software Director of Marketing

Immediately after the Christmas bomber incident in 2009, we highlighted the positive role that broader deployment of (id)entity resolution software could play in preventing terrorist actions. That thought was seconded this week in a piece published by the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC) entitled “Better data analysis for a safer world”:

The technology to connect the dots from disparate data sources already exists, and has done for quite some time. It’s called “entity resolution,” and corporations have been using it for years to compile and ensure accuracy in consumer data. Entity resolution can help avoid many of the mistakes that led to the attempted Christmas bombing: it can overcome spelling errors in databases, alert the right people to a threat in real time, and correlate literally billions of records on an ongoing basis.

As we pointed out 11 months ago, not all identity resolution software has the same capabilities:

… some technologies rely on strategies that actually destroy the forensic integrity of the data. Not all identity resolution technologies are the same. Ours can be configured using a number of strategies to fit particular customer performance requirements, sensitivity to false positives or false negatives, and Similarity Search behaviors, including specialized name algorithms that catch misspellings, nicknames, and ordering variations.

The CBC article suggests how expanding the current uses of entity resolution software could bring added benefits:

If the agencies that held these disparate pieces of information were connected and running entity resolution software, red flags would be raised automatically, and those warnings quickly transmitted to the people who make decisions. The same level of intelligent technology and data analysis is important in business, where entity resolution originated.

That last statement supports our January post where we mentioned other uses for the technology:

Although the consequences are grimmer in homeland security situations, the challenges are the same for financial, healthcare, gaming, state and local government, and marketing applications.

The CBC article delineates how businesses benefit from entity resolution:

Knowing who your customers are, where they live, and what they are interested in gives your business a serious advantage - but for large organizations, that requires processing massive amounts of information. The potential for inaccuracies, duplication, and mistaken identity means that companies may be led into poor decisions by misrepresentative data. Entity resolution software was developed to mitigate these risks, and automatically format and clean up the available information.

CEO Mike Shultz has pointed out that our specific technology is “used more times every day for terrorist matching” than any other entity resolution software. Thankfully, the worlds of both business and government seem to be getting the message about the critical importance of this technology.

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-11-30

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

By the Infoglide Staff

wptv.com: Veil lifted on security center
“For the first time ever the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office has opened the doors to its high security fusion center…”
SMART SHIFT: Better data analysis for a safer world

“The technology to connect the dots from disparate data sources already exists, and has done for quite some time. It’s called “entity resolution,” and corporations have been using it for years to compile and ensure accuracy in consumer data. Entity resolution can help avoid many of the mistakes that led to the attempted Christmas bombing: it can overcome spelling errors in databases, alert the right people to a threat in real time, and correlate literally billions of records on an ongoing basis.”

ReadWrite Enterprise: 3 Analyst Firms on the Trends Shaping the Future of IT

Forrester, Gartner and ZapThink have all published their own trend watch-lists. Common themes include cloud computing, mobility and analytics.”

Bloomberg: U.S. Government Completes Takeover of Name Checks From Airlines

“So-called false positives, such as when Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts was barred from a flight in 2004 because his name matched an alias on a watch list, are eliminated under the new program, the agency has said. The computer system the government uses is more sophisticated than the one employed by airlines, and more detailed information is now collected from travelers, the security agency has said.”

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-11-23

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

By the Infoglide Staff

Tim Estes: Information Systems in an Entity-Centric World

 

Gartner: Four Converging Trends That Will Change the Face of IT and Business
“Gartner has identified four broad trends that will change IT, and the economy, in the next 10 years:

  1. Cloud
  2. Business impact of social computing
  3. Context Aware Computing
  4. Pattern Based Strategy

WSJ Health Blog: Web-Based Electronic Health Record Safety Registry Launches

“Even if EHRs reduce the risk of errors overall, they may produce entirely new ones, Edward Fotsch, CEO of PDR Network, which will provide network operations for the new reporting system, tells the Health Blog. For example, EHRs may cut the risk of failing to alert a patient to an abnormal test result, but confusing user interfaces may produce their own mistakes and need tinkering.”

Community of Experts: Identities and Entities: Resolution or Dissolution?

“Even with these differences, a human can rapidly determine that they refer to the same individual for two reasons. The first is that the values that differ across the pair of records are not too different from each other, and the second is that there seems to be enough support from across each pair of attributes to assert some degree of similarity.”

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-11-21

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

By the Infoglide Staff

Penn Olson: State of Cloud Computing

“Today, everything seems to be moving into the cloud. In 2005, investment in cloud computing was about $26 million. But in 2009, the investment grew to $370 million, more than 10 times of what was invested in 2005.”

WSJ: Banks Exit From Embassy Business

“Some of the nation’s largest banks are exiting or scaling back their dealings with foreign embassies and missions in the U.S. because of the burden of complying with money-laundering regulations… ‘It’s a commercial decision, but clearly it has ramifications for diplomatic relations,’ said Mark Toner, acting deputy spokesman for the State Department. ‘We want these foreign missions to be able to carry out their normal diplomatic functions here in the U.S.’”

Sandia National Laboratories: New standard proposed for supercomputing

“There are an estimated 50 million patient records, with 20 to 200 records per patient, resulting in billions of individual pieces of information, all of which need entity resolution: in other words, which records belong to her, him or somebody else.”

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-11-18

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

By the Infoglide Staff

24-7: Medicare Claims Database Highlighting Fraud and Abuse

“According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the program made nearly $24 billion in improper payments in 2009, almost doubling the previous years’ rate. The price of fraud, however, runs even higher. A CBS report notes that Medicare fraud costs taxpayers an estimated $60 billion a year, and some estimates put the figure at nearly $100 billion.”

Information Week: Business Intelligence: How To Get Agile

“For the last two years, respondents to our survey have cited several information management-related problems among the top barriers to adopting BI tools company-wide. Data quality problems are cited most often, by 55% in both 2009 and this year, followed by ease-of-use challenges, and integration and compatibility with existing platforms. Among the people directly responsible for information management, the biggest impediments to success are accessing relevant, timely, reliable data (59%); cleansing, deduping, and ensuring consistent data (51%); and integrating data (49%).”

MyFoxDFW: U.S. Congressman Reacts to Undercover Medicare Investigation

“Billions of your tax dollars are lost every year to healthcare fraud. In fact, the tab is $36Million a day for Medicare fraud alone. U.S. Congressman Michael Burgess of Lewisville watched FOX 4’s undercover investigation in to the practices of a home health care recruiter. Today, FOX 4’s Becky Oliver spoke with Congressman Burgess.”

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-11-15

Monday, November 15th, 2010

By the Infoglide Team

Main Justice:Eric Holder’s Prepared Remarks at Health Care Fraud Prevention Summit

“In just the last fiscal year, we obtained settlements and judgments of more than $2.5 billion in False Claims Act matters alleging health care fraud. This marked a new record – and an increase of more than 60 percent from fiscal year 2009. We also opened more than 2,000 new criminal and civil health-care fraud investigations, reached an all-time high in the number of health-care fraud defendants charged, stopped numerous large-scale fraud schemes in their tracks, and returned more than $2.5 billion to the Medicare Trust Fund and more than $800 million to cash-strapped state Medicaid programs.”

SearchDataManagement.com: Gartner Magic Quadrant ranks MDM software vendors

Gartner reports that due to the sluggish economy, customer demand for MDM software is growing at a significantly slower rate than years past. But it is growing. The analyst firm predicts that the overall market for MDM software will increase from $1 billion in 2008 to $2.9 billion by 2013. Gartner also predicts that by 2010, investments in MDM software will lead to an 80% reduction in costs associated with managing redundant data.”

The Crime Report: Fusion Centers Could Face Budget Issues As States Cut Back

“Some of the nation’s 72 fusion centers–where federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies share data on terrorism and crime threats–may face budget problems in the nation’s tough economic conditions. Ross Ashley of the National Fusion Center Association, which represents the centers, says that some newly elected governors must be convinced of the centers’ worth. The agencies typically do not have line-item budgets and are dependent on allocations from various levels of government to operate.”

Sponsoring ICIQ This Weekend

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

By Mike Betron, Infoglide Software Director of Marketing

Infoglide Software is a proud sponsor of the 15th International Conference on Information Quality (ICIQ). The 2010 edition of this annual event is being hosted this weekend by the George W. Dohaghey College of Engineering and Information Technology at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Researchers from all over the world will convene to share the results of their efforts.

The organizer of the event is John Talburt, PhD, founder and director of the Center for Advanced Research in Entity Resolution and Information Quality (ERIQ). Infoglide has sponsored the ERIQ lab and the Information Quality graduate program in recent years.

If you’re attending, we’ll be there and look forward to meeting you in Little Rock.

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-11-07

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

[Post from Infoglide] Secure Flight Reaches Critical Milestone

“On November 1, the Secure Flight program achieved a key goal as described on the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) web site: Secure Flight, the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) behind-the-scenes watch list matching program, fulfills a key recommendation of the 9/11 Commission by assuming responsibility of watch list matching from individual airlines. By establishing a consistent watch list matching system, Secure Flight enhances aviation security and more effectively facilitates air travel for passengers.”

ZDNet: Saturday Post: How the cloud will bring the future to the global masses

“With a simple text message system you can bring the power of a supercomputer to the cheapest and simplest mobile phones via cloud computing. For many important applications there is no need to place supercomputing power in the device itself. Simple cell phones can act as smart phones today, thanks to the cloud. That’s an amazing technological advance.”

Ventura County Star: Simi hospital pays $5.15 million to settle Medicare case

“The hospital, according to Field, allegedly paid a doctor $12,000 a month in Medicare money to serve as a medical director and to get patients admitted into a nonexistent program for women with post-traumatic stress disorder. Field also alleged the hospital billed Medicare for services to psychiatric patients without the doctor certification statements required by the government. ‘In essence it appeared that what the hospital was doing was obtaining reimbursement from the federal government for medically unnecessary psychiatric services,’ Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Palombo said.”

Orange County Register: Roofing contractor gets 10 years for workers’ comp fraud scheme

“‘He has taken no responsibility for his conduct,” Kamiabipour said. ‘When he gets out, he’ll do it again.’ Petronella’s attorney, Tom Dunn, said the sentence was fair, though he would have liked to see his client get less time. Dunn also commended the judge for his “thoughtful and sound” decision on restitution. State officials and prosecutors say the couple operated a $38 million workers’ compensation insurance-fraud scheme.”

Identity Resolution Daily Links 2010-10-26

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

By the Infoglide Staff

Workers’ Comp Kit Blog: Comp Surgery Center in Cahoots with 3 Insurance Company Employees to Fraudulently Negotiate Liens Get 12 Years in Prison

“In addition to 12 years in state prison, Montes was ordered to pay more than $1.7 million in restitution with more than $286,000 ordered for FTB for failing to file and report almost $1.5 million in income relating to the insurance fraud during the years 2004, 2005 and 2006.”

Federal Circle: Homeland Security: Fusion Centers Help Keep America Safe

“The DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis, where I serve, takes information and intelligence from across DHS and the national Intelligence Community, processes and analyzes it, and then shares it with the fusion centers, often in joint products with the FBI. The fusion centers then disseminate it to the some 18,000 state, local, tribal, and territorial law enforcement organizations, and to thousands more first responders throughout the country.”

WAVY.com: Passenger safety in airports


Bad Behavior has blocked 1166 access attempts in the last 7 days.

Close
E-mail It
Portfolio Strategy News The Direct Marketing Voice