Identity Theft Protection
Avoid Identity Theft
Proving Yourself the Victim of Identity Theft
Steps to Take If You Suspect You Are The Victim of
Identity Theft
Common Tactics Used by the Identity Thief
Identity Theft Trends
Preventing Identity Theft
Ways to Avoid Having Your Identity
Stolen
The Federal Trade Commission has a consumer alert titled "How Not to Get
Hooked By A Phishing Scam" to warn consumers who receive email that claims
an account will be shut down unless they reconfirm their billing
information. This is recommended reading for anyone concerned
about the rising threat of
identity theft.
Internet scammers casting about for people's financial information have a
new way to lure unsuspecting victims: They go "phishing." Phishing, also
called "carding," is a high-tech scam that uses spam to deceive consumers
into disclosing their credit card numbers, bank account information, Social
Security numbers, passwords, and other sensitive information.
According to the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC), the emails pretend to be from businesses
the potential victims deal with - for example, their Internet service
provider (ISP), online payment service or bank. The fraudsters tell
recipients that they need to "update" or "validate" their billing
information to keep their accounts active, and direct them to a "look-alike"
Web site of the legitimate business, further tricking consumers into
thinking they are responding to a bona fide request. Unknowingly, consumers
submit their financial information - not to the businesses - but the
scammers, who use it to order goods and services and obtain credit.
To avoid getting caught by one of these scams, the FTC, the nation's
consumer protection agency, offers this guidance: If you get an email
that warns you, with little or no notice, that an account of yours will be
shut down unless you reconfirm your billing information, do not reply or
click on the link in the email. Instead, contact the company cited in the
email using a telephone number or Web site address you know to be genuine.
Avoid emailing personal and financial information. Before submitting
financial information through a Web site, look for the "lock" icon on the
browser's status bar. It signals that your information is secure during
transmission.
Review credit card and bank account statements as soon as you receive them
to determine whether there are any unauthorized charges. If your statement
is late by more than a couple of days, call your credit card company or bank
to confirm your billing address and account balances.
Report suspicious activity to the FTC. Send the actual spam to uce@ftc.gov.
If you believe you've been scammed, file your complaint at www.ftc.gov, and
then visit the FTC's Identity Theft Web site (www.ftc.gov/idtheft) to learn
how to minimize your risk of damage from identity theft.
source: Federal Trade Commission