Posts Tagged ‘Personal identification’

By Donna Marrin

Prevention is your best revenge

1. At Home

Lock personal information in a secure place at all times so nobody entering your home, invited or not, can gain access to it.

  • Purchase a personal shredder and shred all documents before you trash them: charge receipts, insurance forms, cheques, bank statements, expired charge cards, etc.
  • Keep a current photocopy (also in a locked, secure place) of every piece of information that you carry with you: your driver’s license, social security card, etc., for immediate referral if your purse or wallet is stolen.

2. Your Mail

It’s a fact of life that our mailboxes sit in isolation for most of each day; therefore, a locking mailbox is your wisest security measure. The more difficult it is to access, the less chance your mail will be targeted.

  • Remove mail as promptly as possible from your mailbox.
  • Be familiar with your billing cycles and follow up immediately if you notice any missing bills. Thieves will use stolen information to submit a “change of address” while paying the minimum charge on a bill, later requesting a new card with a new address. Before long, the thief is using your credit card without your knowledge.
  • Report immediately discrepancies on monthly statements.
  • Thieves have no access to your outgoing mail as long as you drop it directly into designated Canada Post collection boxes.
  • Before you go on vacation, call Canada Post to arrange a vacation hold.

3. Out and About

  • Never supply your Social Insurance Number unless it’s absolutely necessary. Ask if you can use a different form of ID instead.
  • When going out, plan to carry only the identification and credit or debit card that you know you will need to use and secure any extra cards in your locked area at home.
  • Never sign the back of a credit card. Instead, print “Photo ID Required” in the signature area.

4. Security Measures

  • When you create a password, don’t use obvious, locatable information: maiden name, birth dates, consecutive numbers, or parts of your SIN or phone number. And never keep written records of passwords.
  • Never divulge personal information over the phone, Internet or by mail, unless you’re certain you’re dealing with a legitimate organization and you were first to initiate contact. Exercise extreme caution when responding to sales promotions. Identity thieves will create phony promotional offers designed to glean personal information. They pose as bank representatives, lottery administrators, Internet service providers and other official-sounding business personnel. They will do whatever it takes to persuade you to reveal your personal information to them. Do you handle financial transactions over the Internet? If so, ask about their privacy/security policies: Is your personal information shared with other agencies? How secure is their server? How do they store personal information? If you are wary of their policies, discontinue your business with them.
  • Question security policies in your workplace, doctor’s office or any other organizations using your personal information, and know exactly who has access to it. Find out if your information will be shared with mailing list companies, marketing and survey companies or anyone else. Request that your information be kept confidential. Keep your purse or wallet locked in a secure place at work, and do the same with any administrative forms displaying your personal information.

5. Cheques

  • When you reorder cheques, pick them up at the bank instead of having them sent to your mailbox.
  • Have only your first initial and last name printed on your cheques. Not knowing how you sign your cheques will make it a lot more difficult for a thief to forge your full name, since banks keep your signature on file for comparison. It’s also a good idea to have your business address and phone number printed on cheques instead of your home information. Without access to your home address and phone number, a thief who steals your cheques will have difficulty infiltrating other accounts.
  • Never print your SIN or driver’s license numbers on your cheques. You can supply this information later, if absolutely necessary.
  • When paying your credit card account by cheque, do not write your entire account number on the “For” line. Many people view your cheque as it works its way through the payment process. If you supply only the last four digits of your account number, the credit card company can still identify your account.
    Be extremely protective of your personal information. Ask questions, no matter who requests access. Demand to know why they need your information, what they plan to do with it, how long they intend to keep it, who they plan to share it with and how you can feel confident with their security measures. Identity theft is a debilitating crime, and these simple precautions can save you months, if not years, of grief and damage to your financial status.

Fighting Back

If your credit cards or cheques have disappeared, acting fast is the best form of damage control. Identity thieves work against the clock and will abandon efforts the moment they sense detection. Your diligence is key.

  1. Contact your bank and/or credit card company the instant you notice that your cheques and/or credit cards are missing.
  2. File a police report immediately. You should also visit PhoneBusters, Canada’s anti-fraud call centre, to learn more about protecting yourself against fraud.
  3. Call in a fraud alert on your credit report by contacting the following Canadian credit bureaus: Equifax Canada and Trans Union Canada. To read more, visit Public Safety Canada.

Donna Marrin is a freelance Senior Writer/Editor specializing in corporate communications and advertising. She also founded and runs the Markham Village Writers. Visit her at www.markhamvillagewriters.com.

By Donna Marrin

Imagine this: A stranger finds a way to steal your personal information, be it your social insurance number, driver’s license number, credit card and bank account numbers, your mother’s maiden name. Then he uses this information to obtain lines of credit and credit cards from banks and retailers, siphon money from your existing accounts, apply for loans, open accounts with utility companies, rent lodging, file bankruptcy, obtain a job. He uses your name to wreak havoc. It takes you months, even years, to get your life, and your credit rating, back to normal. This isn’t a nightmare—it’s an alarming trend that’s happening right now to people like you.

Let’s look at some facts:

• According to law enforcement officials, identity theft is today’s fastest growing crime
• Criminals will use a victim’s identity to commit a wide range of crimes—from traffic violations to felonies
• Armed with only the victim’s social insurance number, birth date and an address and phone number, a criminal can use this information, combined with a forged driver’s license displaying their own picture, to begin a crime spree in your name.

What spells ‘opportunity’ to a criminal?

  1. Recent Death
    A criminal will do groundwork to locate addresses of any recently deceased by browsing obituary columns in the newspaper, monitoring selected residences and grabbing any mail that accumulates. It may take a few days or as long as a month to collect what they need before they can steal an identity. They look for bank statements, credit card receipts, tax bills, utility bills, and they will pick through garbage if necessary. They depend on the deceased’s loved ones being so distraught that they neglect to notify the post office about cancellation of mail delivery.
  2. High-Tech Tools
    Probably the easiest way to steal an identity is by using a computer recording device (spyware) that transfers information from the victim’s computer to the thief’s. Spyware records all your computer activity: passwords, banking information, credit card numbers, private emails, chat-line conversations. All of your information is funneled directly into a free and untraceable email account, whereupon an automated process scans to extract your most high-security information. You won’t know what hit you until it’s too late. Thieves often also send out emails disguised to appear to be from legitimate businesses requesting personal data.
  3. Easy-To-Access Mailboxes
    What’s an identity thief’s handiest tool? Your mailbox. Any mailbox that offers easy access is fair game. Typically, they seek out bills detailing your personal information. They are not averse to rummaging through your garbage either, in search of personal information. They will go so far as to submit a change of address notice to the post office, having your mail rerouted to a new post office box. They will send in those “pre-approved credit card offers” that they’ve picked from your trash, to credit card companies, with a “new address” substituted. Of course, the new card—with your name on it—is then sent directly to the thief.
  4. “Lost” ID
    Forgery of social insurance cards, driver’s licenses and birth certificates is big business. The only equipment needed is a computer, a good printer, and the right software—easy to find on the Web if you know what to look for. An electronic device called a “skimmer” can be connected to the credit card reader at restaurants or any cash station; it reads the magnetic strip on your card then transmits your personal information to another location, where it is re-encoded and used to create a fraudulent credit card.
  5. Out on the Town with Your Guard Down
    Worst case scenario: a waiter or salesperson retains a record of your card number, expiry date and security code on the back of your card, waits a few weeks, then uses your information to go on an online shopping spree. It has happened. Trying to determine exactly where and when your card numbers were stolen are next to impossible.
    And how careful are you with your password while using an ATM machine? A device similar to the skimmer can be installed to read your card’s data and if the thief happens to be close enough to look over your shoulder as you input your PIN, it won’t be long before you discover that your bank account has been siphoned.

Tune in next week for Part 2 of Identity Theft Hurts: Prevention is your Best Revenge.

Donna Marrin is a freelance Senior Writer/Editor specializing in corporate communications and advertising. She also founded and runs the Markham Village Writers. You can visit their website at www.markhamvillagewriters.com

Each year businesses pay about $74 billion to handle identity theft and data loss crises – and that’s just in the US. The figure is more than $200 billion worldwide.

Identity theft is the fastest growing crime in North America,” says Frank Abagnale, an expert on identity theft and fraud and the subject of Steven Spielberg’s movie “Catch Me if You Can.”

Add to that the alarming fact that 70% of Canadians have had some personal data stolen, and Abagnale believes we have an epidemic on our hands.

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For its part, the Canadian government is trying to stem the tide. In October, Bill S-4, which targets early stages of identity theft crimes, became law.

For entrepreneurs whose personal identities often overlap with their business’s, the risks can be even more disturbing and devastating. Having company data fall into the wrong hands can’t just lead to financial losses, but to lost time repairing the damage.

Be smart. Be prepared.

The key, of course, is a little common sense. And a lot of homework.

More than ever, security threats exist in the most unexpected places, creating opportunities for identities to be stolen from carelessly discarded mail and unauthorized access to computers.

What can you do to protect yourself and your business?

1.    Protect your identity. Shredders are a smart way to eliminate documents or mail that have your name, personal or business information on it.

2.    Protect your PC. Security software like Norton 360 and Webroot Spy Sweeper can provide protection from viruses and spyware, fraudulent websites, phishing scams, hackers and more.

3.    Protect against cheque washing. That’s when criminals erase details from cheques to allow them to be rewritten. Special pens like the Uni-ball 207  lock down ink, helping what you write stay permanent.

4.    Protect your home or office. Fifty percent of identity thefts are committed by people you know. An electronic safe can keep your papers and other valuables off-limits.

Abagnale offers some more great suggestions here.

What are you doing to protect your identity and business data from being stolen?