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The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) recently released a survey showing that 27.3 million Americans have been victims of identity theft in the last five years. Could you be next?
Prevent access to personal information:
- Never release your social security or account numbers in response to emails, telephone calls, or personal requests.
- Keep all sensitive documents, checkbooks, and credit cards securely locked away at home or at work.
- Do not carry your social security card, birth certificate, or passport with you unless necessary.
- Make a copy of any credit cards, your driver’s license, and other pertinent information you carry with you and keep it in a safe place.
- Carry only the credit cards you need and cancel the ones you don’t use.
- Make sure to sign all credit cards as soon as you receive them.
- Shred all documents with any financial information on them.
- Retrieve mail promptly and place outgoing checks or other sensitive documents in a U.S. Postal Service mailbox.
- Sign up for automatic payroll deposits.
- Replace paper bills, statements, and checks with online versions.
- Keep passwords hidden and change them frequently.
- Do not use your mother’s maiden name, your birth date, and the last four digits of your social security number or similar information as a password for anything.
- Use and regularly update firewall and anti-virus software.
- Do not respond to and delete any suspicious emails.
- When distributing financial information, only use websites that contain “https” in the URL header and a padlock icon on your Internet toolbar at the bottom of the screen.
- Do not discard a computer without completely destroying data on the hard drive.
- Be careful when using your ATM card or phone card as someone could be looking over your shoulder to get your PIN number.
Detect unauthorized activity:
- Review bank, credit card, and bill statements weekly. Most accounts can be accessed online.
- Watch for activity on statements of the cards you don’t use or bank accounts you don’t even have.
- Contact your financial provider if you fail to receive statements in a timely manner.
- Review your credit information frequently. Watch for unexpected credit drops. Free annual reports are available
Resolve fraud promptly, minimizing losses and protecting your credit record:
- Ask your financial provider about zero-liability guarantees against fraud and resources to help you resolve and recover any potential losses.
- Victims of theft should immediately notify financial providers, begin monitoring accounts more frequently, and place an alert with all three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion).
- File a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) which maintains a database of identity-theft cases.
- Alert federal and local law enforcement if you suspect or detect identity fraud.
- You may also need to contact the Postal Inspection Service, Social Service Administration, or the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
Contact Information
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