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Identity Theft. By Rebecca Higgins. What is Identity Theft?.
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Identity Theft By Rebecca Higgins
What is Identity Theft? Identity Theft is when someone illegally steals your personal information, usually for personal financial gain. Your Social Security number, bank account numbers, and personal information are the only thing one needs to commit Identity Fraud. There are many ways someone could find out these things. For example, a theft may dumpster dive, use skimming, or even e-mail or call you acting like they are a bank.
Types of Identity Theft Child Identity Theft- can’t be used by theft until child is older and has credit accounts or bank accounts Student Identity theft- easily done because a theft may send an email about an interested college and ask for personal information Senior Identity Theft- very vulnerable because they are very unaware of online sourcesand have trouble monitoring their own accounts Identity theft is quite easy with the following groups:
Current Scams Phishing Phishing is a scam where Internet fraudsters send e-mail messages to trick victims into revealing personal and financial information that can be used to steal the victims’ identity. Current scams include phony e-mails which claim to come from the IRS and which lure the victims into the scam by telling them that they are due a tax refund.
More Currant Scams Doxing The Internet version of social engineering. ID thieves have become skilled at piecing together your information from social networking sites, then using it to elicit more personal data.
Tips for Avoiding Identity Fraud Guard financial information Keep social security number private Keep your mail safe Check your credit reports often Stay safe online Protect your passwords
Statistics About 7% of persons age 16 or older were victims of identity theft in 2012. In 2010 about 8.6 million households had at least one member age 12 or older who experienced one or more types of identity theft.
Frequently Asked Questions Are there laws against identity theft? Yes. Congress passed the Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act in 1998. It made stealing someone's identity with intent a federal felony. How much does it cost to repair an identity theft? Some victims have an easy repair to their identity fraud, but others have to spend thousands of dollars to fix. Many people have reoccurring fraud. In this case, they should frequently check their credit.
More Frequently Asked Questions Are businesses at risk of identity theft? Yes thieves could steal from costumers or break into the companies computer system. Thieves sometimes even steal laptops from the company with personal client information and use this to commit identity theft.
Citations www.fraud.org/learn/identity-theft www.trustedid.com/types-of-identity-theft/ https://www.ncjrs.gov/spotlight/identity_theft/facts.html http://idt911.com/KnowledgeCenter/IdentityTheftFAQ.aspx http://www.protectmyid.com/faq/ http://www.irs.gov/uac/Suspicious-e-Mails-and-Identity-Theft http://www.neamb.com/shopping-discounts/you-need-to-know-about-the-latest-id-theft-scams.htm
Picture Citations www.mlive.com www.southbostontoday.com www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com www.portalsandrails.frbatlanta.org www.voices.yahoo.com www.eclipsepc.com www.computer.howstuffworks.com www.cio.com