Friday, December 07, 2007

Free 30 Min Internet Security Seminar

What You Should Know About Internet Security Before It’s Too Late



Listen Now!!

Friday, November 16, 2007

Holiday Alert_Freeze Your Credit

Hello again,
It's that time again with the holidays near and we're really busy rushing around shopping and looking foward to spending time with family and friends. Just be aware the crooks are out shopping too!!

Here's the latest and best stop gap measure you can take to offer maximum protection.

Credit "Freeze": New Weapon Vs. I.D. Theft

Thursday, November 08, 2007

A Good First Step? What Do You Think??

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bipartisan bill that would let victims of
identity theft seek restitution for money and time they spent repairing
their credit history was introduced on Tuesday in the Senate.

Read the whole article at
Id Theft Protection

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Warning You Have Been Datamined!

Hello,
The holidays are approaching and the scam and con artists are getting redy to go shoppin too! There is a need to protect ourselves but balancing this while protecting our right to privacy is like walking a tightrope. What do you think?



Hundreds of millions are affected each day with little or no control of their destiny.


Datamining Warning

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Beware Of The Frog!!??

Hello again,
This is hot news for you or anyone you know is online this is a must read before you login again!!


Beware of the frog11

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Tips for Fake Check Scams from the National Fraud Information Center

Tips for Recognizing and Avoiding Fake Check Scams

If someone you don’t know wants to pay you by check but wants you to wire some of the money back, beware! It’s a scam that could cost you thousands of dollars.




Read More Here

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Veterans At Risk

Attention:
The risk is real and the cost is dire and I can truly feel the pain of eveyone exposed to this threat. However this is an unusual type of attack because it's like a boomerang or cancer it keeps coming back. In a few previous stories I mention the children. If their records are compromised they will endure problems for the next 60 or more yrs. This also includes prosecution,jail time, credit problems,court costs,litigation,investigation, bankruptcy all costing tax dollars and personal losses. Something must be done.


Veterans At Risk

Friday, August 03, 2007

Immigration Bust at BMW-Seven Illegal Aliens Arrested

Hello, I have to get the word out on this was a local news story which will have a national reach and your children are in danger too!!

Read More Here

Monday, April 23, 2007

Watch Out For Credit Card Skimming

Most people would never hand over their credit cards to strangers, but many do every time they eat at a restaurant when they pay for their meal.


Find Out More Now!!

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Microsoft Refunds XBox LIVE User for Fraudulent Activity

A number of people whose children use X-Box Live have had their back accounts violated.

Read More Here

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Beware During The Tax Crunch!!

Hello,
This is a late breaking story please read now!!

Tax Time Scams

Saturday, April 07, 2007

New for 2007

Hi Again,
We do a number of posts during the year and reading them is fine . However there is an old saying a picture is worth a thousand words. So now from time to time we'll present scammers in action . Here is one sure to get your interest.

T.J. Maxx hack exposes consumer data

Hi Everyone,
This particular story has been flying low and under the radar for months now so please be aware.


Read More Now

'An Identity Theft Waiting To Happen'

US Top Reporters Are Wary

Meatpacker: Immigration Raids Were Show

What A Surprise

Monday, December 11, 2006

Do You Have Children In School

Hello everyone,

I wrote about this problem awhile ago but the word is not getting out and here is a prime example that happened in the local area.If you have a child in school you need to check this out and help spread the word to your local school boards.


Schoolboard Snafu

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Beware of The Double Whammy!!

This particular brand of ID Theft can not only end up costing you money but can also place you in physical danger


Medical ID Theft

Thursday, October 05, 2006

As I Predicted the Advent of New Technologies

The latest I saw is a double threat and also a bit amusing. Cellphone thefts are up dramatically and loosing one can be devestating with all the personal info they contain.

Stolen Phones Holler For Help

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Tips On How To Protect Your PC

Fast Facts

The Commerce Department found that since 2001 the department's 15 operating units had lost track of 1,137 laptop computers.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Read More ID Theft News Here

Friday, September 22, 2006

Protecting Your Personal Data

Hello,
I came across this great article from consumer reports which is really eye-opening.


October 2006
Your privacy for sale


CR Quick Take

Large data brokers have your numbers--Social Security, phone, and credit cards. They might also know about the drugs you take, what you buy, your political party, and your sexual orientation. When we investigated this secretive industry, we discovered:

• Data brokers are willing to sell even your most sensitive information to paying customers, some of them crooks.

• When CR staffers asked to see their own files, they received scant information. One report contained 31 errors.

• The federal government is a steady customer of the data collectors, but there’s no way to know what it collects or exactly how much it pays.

• Pretexters, who lie to get information about you and sell it to anybody, operate largely free of regulation.



Until Valentine’s Day weekend 2005, Elizabeth Rosen had never heard of ChoicePoint. But ChoicePoint, it turns out, knew plenty about her.


That’s when Rosen, a nurse, received a letter and found out that the Alpharetta, Ga., company had collected information about her. Among the sensitive items it had: her Social Security number, records of her insurance claims, her current and past addresses, and her employment history. Now ChoicePoint was informing her that it had inadvertently disclosed her information--and that of 165,000 other Americans--to a group of criminals. What galls Rosen more, she says, is that all along, ChoicePoint itself “was profiting by collecting and selling confidential information about me without my knowledge or consent.”


ChoicePoint, which has $1 billion in annual revenues, is only one entity in a vast and secretive data industry that feeds on private information about you and millions of other Americans. Its inhabitants include corporate mastodons with access to millions of public records; swarms of private investigators, some of whom lie to obtain confidential information; and hundreds of companies selling background checks, profiles, and address lists, all to meet the surging demand from business, law enforcement, and, increasingly since 9/11, the federal government.


The data collectors say that they’re not prying but speeding the retrieval of public records for both consumers and law enforcement, allowing businesses to cut their risks for fraud and helping marketers to zero in on customers who really want their products. “More than two-thirds of what we do is regulated by state and/or federal law,” says Chuck Jones, a spokesman for ChoicePoint.


Federal privacy and data-security laws such as the Fair Credit Reporting Act and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act do guard some categories of data, including information used to determine eligibility for credit or insurance. But a 2006 investigation by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) concluded that such protections are limited and that Congress should require information resellers to safeguard all sensitive personal information.


Indeed, CR’s three-month investigation found that the practices of the data collectors can rob you of your privacy, threaten you with ID theft, and profile you as, say, a deadbeat or a security risk. Worse, there’s no way to find out what they are telling others about you. When our reporters requested their own records, they were told that they could not see everything that was routinely sold to businesses. The meager information they did receive was punctuated with errors.


How CU uses your data


Like many other publishers, Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, engages in database marketing and has established policies to protect customer information. CU rents and exchanges its mailing list and currently pays data brokers to enhance its customer database with supplemental data to assist in marketing and fund-raising campaigns. Information shared excludes Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, financial account numbers, and credit- and debit-card information.


CU publicizes its opt-out policy in each issue of Consumer Reports, describing how readers may request that their names not be released to other mailers. And it adheres to guidelines for the use of customer names set forth by the Direct Marketing Association. CU uses information gathered from subscribers who respond to its surveys, polls, or questionnaires only in aggregated form as source material for Consumer Reports articles and never for marketing purposes.


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