Home Equity ID Theft Ring Points To A Bigger Problem - Page 2

Sadly — although this has been called out as a problem frequently — a lot of fodder (information) used in the scams was obtained by none other than public record searches. The public records used even contained credit applications, credit reports, and the victims' signatures, according to the FBI. BJ Ostegren — who was kind enough to give me a personal demonstration a while back — is the champion of exposing just how much of this information is out there for anyone to grab. If you want to see exactly how much information is available, her website is a good place to start.

Also mentioned in the criminal complaint was that fee-based Internet services were used to obtain some of the information. This is a huge business, which nets billions of dollars a year for the people selling it. I did notice that no one is saying which one of the services were used.

It should also be noted that information like this is bartered in forums on the Internet. Symantec just released a report showing how cheaply some of this information can be obtained. This type of activity is fairly well known and the FBI recently cracked one of the forums (Dark Market). This group allegedly racked up about $70 million in fraud, worldwide.

The individuals arrested in this scheme also used a lot of known technological fraud crutches, such as caller ID spoofing, prepaid cellular, and forwarding calls without the owner's knowledge. Tricking a phone company into forwarding calls is no problem for most fraudsters as little to no due diligence is performed before it is done. You can have your carrier block this feature, or password protect it (recommended) — however doing this is left entirely up to you. So far as caller ID spoofing — it's essentially legal — and anyone can purchase the means to do it right over the Internet.

Continued on the next page Page 1 — Page 2 — Page 3
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Article Author: Ed Dickson

Having worked around financial crimes for a number of years, I noticed they seemed to be on the rise. One reason for this is technology, which grows more rapidly than laws designed to protect us from it. …

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  • 1 - Brian

    Dec 09, 2008 at 9:48 am

    Hi Ed,

    As part of our research I read your article of Dec 2 with interest.

    ID Fraud Prevention starts at home. We at OEM Partnership take ID Theft & Fraud seriously and have developed a software program that hides your sensitive data and enables access to it via a Picture of your choice. No more Usernames and passwords to remember. If you feel your passpicture has been compromised, simply change it! Check out our free trial. Or speak with our East Coast Manager Amanda Berry OEM Partnership Ltd Ottawa Canada [Personal contact info deleted]

    Thanks

    Brian

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