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Steps To Protect Yourself
From Identity Theft
By Jon Arnold
The crime of identity theft increases daily and therefore so do the chances that
you will become a victim of it at some point if you do not take precautions to
protect your personal information. Identity theft, as much as being a crime
being committed regularly, is a royal pain in the backside to get straightened
out, often taking as long as months and even years to get these bogus entries
removed from your credit reports.
Identity theft is by no means limited to online transactions. Reports and
studies indicate that it is just as rampant for offline activities. How about
those offers for pre-approved credit cards or reduced rate mortgages that you
get much more often than necessary delivered via US mail? What do you do with
them? Of course, you have purchased an inexpensive paper shredder from your
local office supply store like Best Buy of Office Depot and shred them, right?
Please don't tell me that you just throw them in the trash, because that is a
prime place for identity theft robbers to get the information that they need to
make YOU a victim of their antics.
From an offline perspective, you are encouraged to look over your credit card
bills when they arrive in the mail. This includes bank statements and your
mortgage statements every month. If someone were to steal the mail out of your
mailbox while you were at work, is there enough information on any of those
statements to enable an identity thief to open new accounts using your identity?
If so, you may wish to have your statements sent to a PO box that is much more
secure than your mailbox standing out by the road all day long where someone
could steal your mail, or even check with your lender to see if they could send
statements electronically via a secure connection to your secure emailbox.
You should place a fraud alert on your credit report, even if you are not a
victim of identity theft. There are different names for this service, but it
will require you to be contacted if anyone (including yourself) applies for
credit using your name. This needs to be done with each of the three major
national credit bureaus – Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. If they give you
any trouble with this, you are encouraged to report them to your state's
division of financial regulation. You are trying to protect yourself, they are
providing a service, and if they are uncooperative, you do not need to put up
with it.
One point to be taken very seriously is that if you have become a victim of
identity theft, do NOT make any payments on any of the bills opened by the
thief. If you do, this action could be used by the creditor to claim that it
really is your account since you made at least one payment on it. As ludicrous
as that sounds, you need to understand that the creditor realizes that if
identity theft can be proven, they will most likely not even be able to collect
as much as a penny on the dollar for the balance owed. So the creditor will make
every attempt possible to claim that the fraudulent account really is yours, and
if you make any payments on it, that will only service to substantiate their
claims.
Be vigilant! You have rights and you need to be aware of what they are. You
should also be aware that identity theft protection is available if you wish to
utilize that route to protect yourself against identity theft.
Jon is a computer engineer with extensive experience in many areas. For more
information about <a target="_new" href="http://www.identity-theft-info.com">Identity
Theft Protection</a> please visit his web site at <a target="_new" href="http://www.identity-theft-info.com">http://www.identity-theft-info.com</a>
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