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    Home Cybersecurity
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    Identity Theft Crisis

    Written by

    Brian Livingston
    Published August 11, 2003
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      Theres a giant shopping spree going on, and you can be part of it! Thousands of people are buying millions of dollars worth of stuff, using credit cards with your name on them. What? You havent been a victim of identity theft yet? Dont worry, you will be soon, if the card issuers dont clean up todays rampant free-for-all.

      Its often reported that 700,000 people were victims of identity theft in the United States last year, based on Federal Trade Commission figures. But that number is seldom put into context. It far outstrips the 418,000 robberies committed in the country in 2002, according to the FBIs Uniform Crime Reporting Program.

      And the FTCs count may actually understate the problem. A new survey by research firm Gartner (see www.bri.li/3321) shows that as many as 7 million Americans feel theyve been subjected to identity theft or something like it in the past year.

      Identity theft turns peoples lives upside down. After someone has run up massive unpaid bills in your name, you often cant get a mortgage or refinance your house for months while you try to clear your name. Meanwhile, that ringing sound you hear is yet another collection agency calling you up about charges you swear you didnt make.

      Identity theft is being stoked by computers programmed to blindly issue credit cards or telephone calling cards to vermin who apply in other peoples names. Just enter someone elses information, plus a Social Security number perhaps, and out pops the plastic. Char-r-r-ge!

      This plague of pilfering has crept up on us because we thought it was someone elses problem. We need to take action before were hit with more bogus credit card charges than legitimate ones, just as there are now more spam messages than legitimate e-mail.

      Computer professionals are not unaware of the problem. Last month, a new program was announced by BITS, the technology group of the Financial Services Roundtable, an association comprising the countrys 100 largest financial institutions. Leaders of the organization described a new “uniform affidavit,” a single report that banks and credit card companies would accept from identity theft victims rather than requiring multiple statements (www. bri.li/3322).

      Hmm, wait a minute. How would a redesigned form stop identity theft? You cant use the form until youve already been bilked. Redoing the paperwork is like noticing that a roving maniac is taking swipes at people with a chain saw and then offering Band-Aids to the victims whove lost arms and legs.

      Asked about this, BITS CEO Catherine Allen said, “Weve been focused on the prevention side as well as the victim-assistance side.” Allen cited the groups fraud reduction program, a series of best-practices white papers that businesses are advised to follow. I sure hope that works.

      Unfortunately, we cant count on the credit industry to clean up its computer procedures on its own. Thats because the issuers dont bear all the costs of fraud. When a credit card obtained through identity theft is used to buy products, the store that handed over the goods often loses the full amount—plus a $10 to $100 “transaction fee.” Thats despite the fact that the credit card issuer sent out the bogus card and provided authorization codes before the purchases went through.

      One ray of hope is that some big players realize that things have got to change. “There are some credit card companies that do a better job than others in checking identity,” said Jay Foley, co-executive director of the nonprofit Identity Theft Resource Center (idtheftcenter.org). Three innovators, in his opinion, are “Capital One, Citibank, Chase—these are all companies that are taking a more proactive approach.” Operations such as these, Foley said, actually contact credit rating firms to verify the identity of the person seeking credit in your name.

      That helps, but until more issuers follow suit, dont be surprised when the Brooklyn Bridge shows up on your credit card statement.

      Brian Livingston is editor of briansbuzz.com and co-author of “Windows Me Secrets” and nine other books. His column appears every other week in eWEEK. To send tips, visit www.briansbuzz.com/contact. Send your comments to eWEEK@ziffdavis.com.

      Brian Livingston
      Brian Livingston

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