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Consumer News Last Updated: Jul 2nd, 2008 - 21:15:22


Consumers Be Aware -- Credit Freeze a Step in the Right Direction, But Will Not Eliminate Identity Theft
By
Oct 18, 2007, 21:12

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Article Translations: English German Spanish French Italian Portuguese Japanese Korean Chinese
(ARA) – Two of the three major credit bureaus are now allowing consumers in all 50 states to “freeze” their credit histories. The companies say the move gives consumers another option to safeguard their credit against identity thieves. But is it enough?

“It’s a good step, but it’s not the be all, end all solution,” says Justin Yurek, president of ID Watchdog, an identity theft monitoring service.

Placing a freeze on your credit report locks the data until you give permission to release the data by unlocking your report. But, says Yurek, “Every time you do this it costs money and if you want a credit card or access to credit, you have to unlock it.”

More important, Yurek says, is the fact that 70 percent of identity theft crimes have nothing to do with credit reports. “A thief could steal your wallet with your driver’s license in it and commit a crime, open a P.O. Box, get a cell phone, put utilities in your name. That has nothing to do with credit.”

According to the United States Federal Trade Commission, identity theft is the fastest growing crime in the country. It cost businesses and consumers more than $56 billion in 2005 and most people do not discover their information has been stolen until 12 months after a thief first uses it. Worse, fewer than one in 700 identity theft crimes lead to a conviction.

“We need to understand that prevention isn’t a feasible concept now,” says Yurek. “If a thief wants your identity, they’ll get it. No matter how careful you are they could hack into a database, they could physically steal a laptop, there is no guarantee.”

Since, as Yurek says, there is no foolproof way to guarantee your identity won’t be stolen, stay alert for signs that someone may be using your identity.

* If you fail to receive bills or other mail on time or as expected, call the sender directly. A missing bill could mean an identity thief has taken over your account and changed the mailing address.

* You begin receiving credit cards you did not apply for.

* You have been denied credit or are receiving less favorable credit terms -- a higher interest rate or lower credit limit than you’ve received in the past.

* You begin receiving calls from debt collection agencies or businesses regarding merchandise you did not purchase.

FTC statistics show that once a consumer becomes a victim of identity theft, the average time spent repairing the problem is between 400 and 600 hours.

“In the year 2000 there were 100,000 victims of identity theft,” says Yurek. “In 2006, there were 10 million identity theft victims. The crime is still growing and with companies like ID Watchdog there is a new approach to identity theft monitoring and prevention.”

Services such as ID Watchdog scrutinize customer information and guarantee that if thieves slip something past, the company will fix any problems the customer experiences and help them regain and retain their identity.

“ID Watchdog doesn’t just look at reports from three credit bureaus, we monitor thousands of databases because only 30 percent of identity theft victims get hit in ways that show up on credit reports,” Yurek says. The service also educates consumers about how their personal information -- name, date of birth, Social Security number, phone number and address -- show up in databases all over the world, information most consumers just don’t have access to.

Further information on identity theft can be obtained from the FTC online at www.ftc.gov and a free trial of the ID Watchdog service is available at www.idwatchdog.com or by calling (866) 416-0783.

© Copyright by Eveningsnews.com

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