The Federal Trade Commission issued a staff report (PDF) on Monday, which documents the experiences of identity theft victims following the loss of their personal information. The report focuses on the three consumer reporting agencies, with 68 percent of respondents reporting themselves somewhat or very satisfied with their experiences dealing with the agencies. However, a significant portion of respondents reported difficulty reaching a live person at the agencies by phone. In addition, respondents seemed unaware of their rights under the law, such as the ability to receive fraud alerts, correct fraudulent information and request free credit reports from all three agencies.

Arlington National Cemetery To Use Geospatial Mapping: The Army announced Thursday that officials at Arlington National Cemetery will use geospatial mapping software to manage operations,  making it the first national cemetery to use the technology. Problems with unmarked graves and the mismanagement of resources were among the many revelations that drew headlines last year after an Army investigation. A task force is currently working to photograph and verify all of the nearly 260,000 gravesites in the cemetery. On The Move: CQ's Eric Naing and Rebecca Shabad report former Department of Homeland Security deputy assistant secretary Roberts Hooks has been hired as division director for CBRNE Technology at TASC Inc. ICYMI - Wikimedia Leaves GoDaddy: The Wikimedia foundation, which provides the fifth-most visited Web properties in the world including Wikipedia, officially severed its relationship with domain provider GoDaddy on Friday over the firm's initial support of the Stop Online Piracy Act (HR 3261). GoDaddy initially voiced support for the bill last autumn, spawning a protest by reddit users. GoDaddy quickly backed off its position, but not before numerous customers transferred their domains to other providers. The rising tide of online protests against the bill eventually forced its sponsors to concede defeat earlier this year.