Privacy: Tips for Protecting Your Personal Information
Every day you share personal information about yourself
with others. It's so routine that you may not even
realize you're doing it. You may write a check at the
grocery store, charge tickets to a ball game, rent a car,
mail your tax returns, buy a gift online, call home on
your cell phone, schedule a doctor's appointment or
apply for a credit card.
Each transaction requires you to
share personal information: your bank and credit card
account numbers; your income; your Social Security number
(SSN); or your name, address and phone numbers.
It's important to find out what happens to the
personal information you and your children provide to
companies, marketers and government agencies. These
organizations may use your information simply to process
your order; to tell you about products, services, or
promotions; or to share with others.
Identity Theft: Fastest-Growing White-Collar Crime in U.S.
And then there are unscrupulous individuals, like identity
thieves, who want your information to commit fraud.
Identity theft - the fastest-growing white-collar crime in
America - occurs when someone steals your personal
identifying information, like your SSN, birth date or
mother's maiden name, to open new charge accounts,
order merchandise or borrow money.
Consumers targeted by
identity thieves usually don't know they've been
victimized. But when the fraudsters fail to pay the bills
or repay the loans, collection agencies begin pursuing the
consumers to cover debts they didn't even know they
had.
FTC Tips for Managing and Protecting Personal Information
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) encourages you to make
sure your transactions - online and off - are secure and
your personal information is protected. The FTC offers
these tips to help you manage your personal information
wisely, and to help minimize its misuse.
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Before you reveal any personally identifying
information, find out how it will be
used and whether it will be shared
with others.
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Ask about company's privacy
policy: Will you have a choice about the
use of your information; can you choose to have it kept
confidential?
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Read the privacy policy on any website
directed to children. Websites directed
to children or that knowingly collect information from
kids under 13 must post a notice of their information
collection practices.
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Put passwords on your credit card, bank and
phone accounts. Avoid using easily
available information like your mother's maiden
name, your birth date, the last four digits of your SSN
or your phone number, or obvious choices like a series
of consecutive numbers or your hometown football team.
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Minimize the identification information and
the number of cards you carry to what
you'll actually need. Don't put all your
identifying information in one holder in your purse,
briefcase or backpack.
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Keep items with personal information in a
safe place. When you discard receipts,
copies of credit applications, insurance forms,
physician statements, bank checks and statements,
expired charge cards, credit offers you get in the mail
and mailing labels from magazines, tear or shred them.
That will help thwart any identity thief who may pick
through your trash or recycling bins to capture your
personal information.
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Consider ordering a copy of your credit
report from each of the three major
credit reporting agencies (CRAs) every year. Make sure
it's accurate and includes only those activities
you've authorized. CRAs can't charge you more
than $9.00 for a copy and in some states, your credit
report is free.
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Use a secure browser when shopping
online to guard the security of your
transactions. When submitting your purchase
information, look for the “lock” icon on
the browser's status bar to be sure your
information is secure during transmission.
Source: Federal Trade Commission