Friday, August 21, 2020
So Your Identitys Been Stolen ... Now What
So Your Identitys Been Stolen ... Now What So Your Identitys Been Stolen Now What? So Your Identitys Been Stolen Now What?The damage caused by a stolen identity could take years to fix. Heres what you can do to limit that damage as much as possible.The bank can take your house. A pickpocket could grab your wallet. And if you donât watch out, the witch who lives in that candy house down the street will steal your children away to turn them into gingerbread.But at least thereâs one thing no one can take from you: your identity right?Unfortunately not. Identity theft is very, very real. Thatâs why itâs important to know how to tell if your identity has been stolen and what to do when it has. Lucky for you, we spoke to the experts to get the answers to each of those questions! Identity theft is only growing worse.âIdentity theft continues to grow due to a growing number of data breaches,â warned Justin Lavelle, Chief Communications Officer at BeenVerified.com (@BeenVerified).âA data breach involves a companyâs customersâ records being accessed in a fraudulent manner. These records often include the customerâs name, Social Security number, date of birth, home address, and driverâs license number. When large companies have a data breach, millions of customers are affected.âOnline shopping is another reason why identity theft is on the rise, he continued. Shoppers who are not knowledgeable of the risks of online shopping may use their credit card or bank information to make a purchase online and compromise their personal information.Online shopping presents one of the greatest opportunities for fraud. The long-term trend shows that it will continue to grow as consumers shop more online than in person and these criminals get more sophisticated in their knowledge of compromising online data.âHow do you know that your identity has been stolen?Most of the time, when something is stolen from you, youâll know it. If your car isnât parked in front of your house where you left it, then it was either stolen, towed, or gained a life of its own and youâre living in a Stephen King book. But if your identity was stolen, It may not be quite so obviousLavelle offered the following common identity theft warning signs:âBank withdrawals have been made from your account that you didnât authorize.You receive calls from debt collectors regarding debts that are not yours.You stop receiving your mail.Merchants will not accept your checks due to insufficient funds when you are certain you have the funds to cover your purchase.Your credit report lists accounts that you didnât open.The IRS notifies you that you have two tax returns which were filed under your name.You are notified that a company where you have an account has had a data breach.Lavelle also warned that it might be more subtle than that with this example:âYou discover a small âtest chargeâ on your credit card. A hacker will often place a small charge on your card as a test to see whether or not the charge will be accepted. Once it is accep ted, they will charge a larger amount at a later time.You may start receiving phone calls or mail soliciting you to purchase a car, take out a personal loan, or other grand expenses. These could be due to someone spending a lot of your money and often, thus making you seem like a viable prospect for these solicitors.âNow what?OK, so youâre pretty sure that your identity has been stolen in some form. What do you do now?âDepending on the nature of the identity theft issue, first steps are fixing whatâs broke,â explained identity theft expert and CEO of Safr.Me Robert Siciliano (@RobertSiciliano). âThat might mean âNew account fraudâ and contacting a creditor that appears on a credit report or contacts you for nonpayment, and informing them that you werenât the one that opened up the account, having those lines of credit shut down, and being made whole.âAdditionally, it can be worth reaching out to the credit agencies themselves.âIf your identity has been stolen you want to obtain a copy of your credit report directly from Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax,â advised nationally recognized credit expert Jeanne Kelly, (@creditscoop).âYou can add a freeze on your credit report for free. You can file a police report and bring the credit reports and any other accounts that funds were taken out of or charged on.âYou should also reach out to the credit card companies directly, if appropriate. Steve Weisman, a lawyer, author, and identity theft expert who writes at Scamicide.com (@Scamicide), suggested the following:âIf your credit card was used by identity thieves, you should report the crime to your credit card issuer, have the phony charges removed, have the account closed and get a new credit card.If your name or credit was used to make fraudulent purchases, you should contact the company where the fraudulent purchase was made and inform them that the charge was fraudulent and they should remove the charge.You also should report the c rime to the police. They are unlikely to catch the criminal, but it serves as a good record for later proving your innocence of any wrongdoing.âYou also should check your credit reports at each of the three major credit reporting agencies to have any faulty information removed from your credit report. The credit reporting agencies will remove fraudulent charges after they do an investigation.You should then freeze your credit reports at each of the credit reporting agencies to prevent the identity thief from using your personal information, such as your Social Security number, for future large purchases or lines of credit.Freezing your credit is the single best thing anyone can do to help prevent identity theft.âBe diligent and change your passwords.Even if youâve taken the steps listed above, you wonât quite be out of the woods. Youâll have to be especially careful in the coming months.âChange all your passwords, your login usernames, and your email address,â urged Dr ew Kellerman, founder of Phase 2 Wealth Advisors in Gig Harbor, Washington.âIf you direct your new email address to âpullâ mail from the old one, you donât need to alert everyone you know about the change. Just make sure you do NOT instruct the old address forward messages to the new email. Doing so would provide a potential hacker with a portal to access your new email.Kellerman also offered some advice to make your password more secure:âUse a space. Security researchers obtained a list of 550 million passwords and found that only 0.03% used a space. A space works just like any other character in a password, but using one or more spaces increases the passwordâs strength.âIt turns out the longer the password, the more secure. It doesnât need to be an unrecognizable mass of letters, numbers, and symbols. It simply needs to be long. Letâs assume that one of your favorite movies is the original Star Wars. What famous line will you NEVER forget from that film? âMay t he force be with you.ââMany sites require symbols, numbers, upper and lower-case letters. You can work these requirements into your new passwords in a consistent manner that is easy to remember. For example, always start the sentence with an upper-case letter and finish the quote with the same symbol/number combination.âAre you in the habit of writing down your passwords somewhere? Say you have an online bank account and are using âMay the force be with you @1â as the password. Put a memo in your smartphone or tablet that simply reads, âBank: Mtfbwy@1.â This will help trigger your memory of which password you are using with this account but will likely bewilder anyone else who gets ahold of your device.âThis password advice will be useful to prevent future identity theft as well. And speaking of preventing future identity theft, weâll have more to say on that subject soonTo learn more about protecting yourself from scammers, check out these related posts and articl es from OppLoans:Never Trust and Always Verify: How to Avoid Getting Scammed Over Email10 Common Scams: How They Work and How to Avoid ThemDating App Dangers: 7 Tips to Avoid Getting Scammed by a Fake RomanceSo Your Package Got Stolen ⦠Now What?Do you have a question about scams and identity theft youd like us to answer? Let us know! You can find us on Facebook and Twitter.Visit OppLoans on YouTube | Facebook | Twitter | LinkedIN | InstagramContributorsDrew Kellerman is the founder of Phase 2 Wealth Advisors in Gig Harbor, Washington.Jeanne Kelly (@creditscoop) is an author, speaker, and coach who educates people to achieve a higher credit score and understand credit reporting. #HealthyCredit is her motto. As the founder of The Kelly Group in 2000 and the author of The 90-Day Credit Challenge, Jeanne Kelly is a nationally recognized authority on credit consulting and credit score improvement.Justin Lavelle is a Scams Prevention Expert and the Chief Communicati ons Officer of BeenVerified.com (@BeenVerified). BeenVerified is a leading source of online background checks and contact information. It helps people discover, understand and use public data in their everyday lives and can provide peace of mind by offering a fast, easy and affordable way to do background checks on potential dates. BeenVerified allows individuals to find more information about people, phone numbers, email addresses, and property records.Robert Siciliano (@RobertSiciliano) is a #1 Best-Selling Author and CEO of Safr.Me. Safr.Me is funny but serious about teaching you and your audience fraud prevention and personal security. Robert is a United States Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla Staff Officer of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security whose motto is Semper Paratus (Always Ready). His programs are cutting edge, easily digestible and provide best practices to keep you, your clients and employees safe and secure. Your audience will walk away as experts in identi ty theft prevention, online reputation management, online privacy and data security.Steve Weisman is a lawyer, college professor at Bentley University and author. He is one of the countryâs leading experts in identity theft. His most recent book is âIdentity Theft Alert.â He also writes the blog Scamicide.com (@Scamicide) where he provides daily updated information about the latest scams and identity theft schemes.
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