• ID Theft Signs

    From Daryl Stout@454:1/33 to All on Tue Mar 1 00:01:39 2022
    What is Identity Theft?

    Identity theft happens when a criminal steals information about you and
    uses that information to commit fraud, such as requesting unemployment benefits, tax refunds, or a new loan or credit card in your name. If you
    don't take precautions, you may end up paying for products or services
    that you didn't buy and dealing with the stress and financial heartache
    that follows identity theft.

    Your personal information exists in numerous places all over the internet. Every time you browse or purchase something online, watch a video, buy groceries, visit your doctor, or use an app on your smartphone,
    information about you is being collected. That information is often
    legally sold or shared with other companies. Even if just one of these
    gets hacked, the criminals can gain access to your personal information.
    Assume that some information about you is already available to criminals
    and consider what you can do to slow down or detect the use of your
    information for fraud.

    How to detect it

    * Review your financial cards and other accounts regularly for any
    charges or payments you did not make. An easy way to do this is to
    sign up for email, text messages, or phone app notifications for
    payments and other transactions. Monitor them for fraud.

    * Investigate situations when merchants decline your credit or debit
    cards. Look into letters or phone calls from debt collectors for
    overdue payments for credit cards, medical bills, or loans that you
    know are not yours.

    * Pay attention to letters that inform you about unemployment or other
    government benefit claims for which you never applied.

    * If available in your area, review your credit reports at least once
    a year. For example, in the United States, you can request free
    reports from annualcreditreport.com.

    What to do when it happens

    * Contact the organization that is involved in the fraud. For example,
    if a criminal opened a credit card in your name, call that credit
    card company to notify it about the fraud. If someone filed for a
    tax refund or unemployment benefits in your name, contact the
    corresponding government organization.

    * File a report with law enforcement to create an official record of
    identity theft. You can often do this online. For example, in the
    United States you can report at identitytheft.gov. Follow the
    site's instructions for any additional steps you may need to take.

    * When responding to fraud, keep records of your interactions with your
    financial institutions and law enforcement, as well as the costs you
    incur due to identity theft in case these details will be needed later.

    * Notify your insurance company; you may have identity theft protection
    included in one of your policies.

    How to defend against it

    Here are some simple steps you can take to decrease the chance of identity fraud happening:

    * Limit how much information you share about yourself with online
    services and websites.

    * Use a unique strong password for all of your online accounts and enable
    two-factor authentication as additional protection for your most
    important accounts.

    * If applicable in your location, restrict who can get access to your
    credit reports. For example, in the United States freeze your credit
    score so that anyone who tries to get a credit card or loan in your
    name has to first temporarily unfreeze it.

    * Consider getting insurance coverage, either through a dedicated policy
    or as part of your existing insurance plan, that covers the costs of
    dealing with identity theft.

    Guest Editor Lenny Zeltser is the CISO at Axonius, a cybersecurity asset management company. He also teaches malware combat and writing at the SANS Institute. Lenny is active on Twitter as @lennyzeltser and writes a security blog at zeltser.com.

    OUCH! Is published by SANS Security Awareness and is distributed under the Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. You are free to share or distribute
    this newsletter as long as you do not sell or modify it.

    (C) SANS Institute 2021
    www.sans.org/security-awareness
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (454:1/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@454:1/33 to All on Tue Nov 1 00:07:21 2022
    What is Identity Theft?

    Identity theft happens when a criminal steals information about you and
    uses that information to commit fraud, such as requesting unemployment benefits, tax refunds, or a new loan or credit card in your name. If you
    don't take precautions, you may end up paying for products or services
    that you didn't buy and dealing with the stress and financial heartache
    that follows identity theft.

    Your personal information exists in numerous places all over the internet. Every time you browse or purchase something online, watch a video, buy groceries, visit your doctor, or use an app on your smartphone,
    information about you is being collected. That information is often
    legally sold or shared with other companies. Even if just one of these
    gets hacked, the criminals can gain access to your personal information.
    Assume that some information about you is already available to criminals
    and consider what you can do to slow down or detect the use of your
    information for fraud.

    How to detect it

    * Review your financial cards and other accounts regularly for any
    charges or payments you did not make. An easy way to do this is to
    sign up for email, text messages, or phone app notifications for
    payments and other transactions. Monitor them for fraud.

    * Investigate situations when merchants decline your credit or debit
    cards. Look into letters or phone calls from debt collectors for
    overdue payments for credit cards, medical bills, or loans that you
    know are not yours.

    * Pay attention to letters that inform you about unemployment or other
    government benefit claims for which you never applied.

    * If available in your area, review your credit reports at least once
    a year. For example, in the United States, you can request free
    reports from annualcreditreport.com.

    What to do when it happens

    * Contact the organization that is involved in the fraud. For example,
    if a criminal opened a credit card in your name, call that credit
    card company to notify it about the fraud. If someone filed for a
    tax refund or unemployment benefits in your name, contact the
    corresponding government organization.

    * File a report with law enforcement to create an official record of
    identity theft. You can often do this online. For example, in the
    United States you can report at identitytheft.gov. Follow the
    site's instructions for any additional steps you may need to take.

    * When responding to fraud, keep records of your interactions with your
    financial institutions and law enforcement, as well as the costs you
    incur due to identity theft in case these details will be needed later.

    * Notify your insurance company; you may have identity theft protection
    included in one of your policies.

    How to defend against it

    Here are some simple steps you can take to decrease the chance of identity fraud happening:

    * Limit how much information you share about yourself with online
    services and websites.

    * Use a unique strong password for all of your online accounts and enable
    two-factor authentication as additional protection for your most
    important accounts.

    * If applicable in your location, restrict who can get access to your
    credit reports. For example, in the United States freeze your credit
    score so that anyone who tries to get a credit card or loan in your
    name has to first temporarily unfreeze it.

    * Consider getting insurance coverage, either through a dedicated policy
    or as part of your existing insurance plan, that covers the costs of
    dealing with identity theft.

    Guest Editor Lenny Zeltser is the CISO at Axonius, a cybersecurity asset management company. He also teaches malware combat and writing at the SANS Institute. Lenny is active on Twitter as @lennyzeltser and writes a security blog at zeltser.com.

    OUCH! Is published by SANS Security Awareness and is distributed under the Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. You are free to share or distribute
    this newsletter as long as you do not sell or modify it.

    (C) SANS Institute 2021
    www.sans.org/security-awareness
    --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (454:1/33)
  • From Daryl Stout@454:1/33 to All on Wed Mar 1 00:08:28 2023
    What is Identity Theft?

    Identity theft happens when a criminal steals information about you and
    uses that information to commit fraud, such as requesting unemployment benefits, tax refunds, or a new loan or credit card in your name. If you
    don't take precautions, you may end up paying for products or services
    that you didn't buy and dealing with the stress and financial heartache
    that follows identity theft.

    Your personal information exists in numerous places all over the internet. Every time you browse or purchase something online, watch a video, buy groceries, visit your doctor, or use an app on your smartphone,
    information about you is being collected. That information is often
    legally sold or shared with other companies. Even if just one of these
    gets hacked, the criminals can gain access to your personal information.
    Assume that some information about you is already available to criminals
    and consider what you can do to slow down or detect the use of your
    information for fraud.

    How to detect it

    * Review your financial cards and other accounts regularly for any
    charges or payments you did not make. An easy way to do this is to
    sign up for email, text messages, or phone app notifications for
    payments and other transactions. Monitor them for fraud.

    * Investigate situations when merchants decline your credit or debit
    cards. Look into letters or phone calls from debt collectors for
    overdue payments for credit cards, medical bills, or loans that you
    know are not yours.

    * Pay attention to letters that inform you about unemployment or other
    government benefit claims for which you never applied.

    * If available in your area, review your credit reports at least once
    a year. For example, in the United States, you can request free
    reports from annualcreditreport.com.

    What to do when it happens

    * Contact the organization that is involved in the fraud. For example,
    if a criminal opened a credit card in your name, call that credit
    card company to notify it about the fraud. If someone filed for a
    tax refund or unemployment benefits in your name, contact the
    corresponding government organization.

    * File a report with law enforcement to create an official record of
    identity theft. You can often do this online. For example, in the
    United States you can report at identitytheft.gov. Follow the
    site's instructions for any additional steps you may need to take.

    * When responding to fraud, keep records of your interactions with your
    financial institutions and law enforcement, as well as the costs you
    incur due to identity theft in case these details will be needed later.

    * Notify your insurance company; you may have identity theft protection
    included in one of your policies.

    How to defend against it

    Here are some simple steps you can take to decrease the chance of identity fraud happening:

    * Limit how much information you share about yourself with online
    services and websites.

    * Use a unique strong password for all of your online accounts and enable
    two-factor authentication as additional protection for your most
    important accounts.

    * If applicable in your location, restrict who can get access to your
    credit reports. For example, in the United States freeze your credit
    score so that anyone who tries to get a credit card or loan in your
    name has to first temporarily unfreeze it.

    * Consider getting insurance coverage, either through a dedicated policy
    or as part of your existing insurance plan, that covers the costs of
    dealing with identity theft.

    Guest Editor Lenny Zeltser is the CISO at Axonius, a cybersecurity asset management company. He also teaches malware combat and writing at the SANS Institute. Lenny is active on Twitter as @lennyzeltser and writes a security blog at zeltser.com.

    OUCH! Is published by SANS Security Awareness and is distributed under the Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. You are free to share or distribute
    this newsletter as long as you do not sell or modify it.

    (C) SANS Institute 2021
    www.sans.org/security-awareness
    --- SBBSecho 3.14-Win32
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (454:1/33)