Five Simple Things You Should Be Doing to Protect Your Identity

For 12 years in a row, identity theft has been the top consumer complaint to the Federal Trade Commission โ€” in 2011, there were 279,156 identity theft complaints filed. There is no air-tight method of preventing the crime totally, however there are steps you can take to make sure youโ€™re not making yourself an easy target for identity thieves.  Here are five good habits to adopt that can reduce your chances of fraud.

Buy a Shredder, and Use It

Shredding documents might seem to be a bit of an outdated strategy in an era where financial transactions are increasingly electronic. But dumpster-diving identity thieves still exist, and if they can get a hold of sensitive documents like bank statements and expired credit cards, they can do some real damage. Get a cross-cut shredder โ€” simple โ€œstripโ€ shredders produce pieces that could hypothetically be reassembled โ€” and use it whenever you think youโ€™re throwing out something sensitive.

Keep Hard Copies in a Safe Place

Sensitive financial information youโ€™re throwing out should obviously be shredded, but the data youโ€™re holding onto should be kept secure. Your Social Security number, for example, shouldnโ€™t be kept in your wallet (try to memorize it), and the Federal Trade Commission recommends not using it as your driverโ€™s license number. And the FTC also recommends keeping personal information in a secure location in your home, where it canโ€™t be stolen by an opportunistic family member, contractor or roommate.

Be Smart About Email

Simply having an antivirus running in the background on your home PC isnโ€™t enough to protect your electronic data from hackers. Many instances of data theft rely not on complicated cyber attacks, but on exploiting the naรฏvetรฉ of users like you. Such โ€œsocial engineeringโ€ attacks often take the form of a phishing email purporting to be from a bank, retailer or other company with which youโ€™ve done business. Usually theyโ€™ll ask you to send in some sensitive account information, or perhaps direct you to a fake site that looks a lot like your online banking setup and prompts you to enter your username and password. To protect customers against such attacks, most companies have a policy of never calling or emailing you to ask for account information, so if you get any such requests, treat it with the highest level of scrutiny and donโ€™t hesitate to call your bank directly.

Use a Credit Card

You wonโ€™t be able to prevent all forms of identity theft; a waiter who disappears with your card or a lesser-known online merchant could both be selling off your card data to the highest bidder and making purchases on your account. Thatโ€™s why you should almost always use a credit card, which offers more fraud protection than a debit card. โ€œThe safest way to shop on the Internet is with a credit card,โ€ advises the Identity Theft Resource Center. โ€œIn the event something goes wrong, you are protected under the federal Fair Credit Billing Act,โ€ which caps your liability at $50. Debit cards make it easier to track your spending, but with damages capped by law at $500, itโ€™s easy to see which payment method affords you more protection.

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Monitor Your Accounts.

This one is a no-brainer, but weโ€™re guessing a lot of you are only checking your accounts once a month, when the statement comes. Online banking allows you to check in on your debit and credit card accounts 24/7, and you should take full advantage, as the sooner you spot a purchase you didnโ€™t make, the sooner you can put a stop to the fraud. And while youโ€™re at it, take heed of these other warning signs that your account has been compromised.

Image: CarbonNYC, via Flickr

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