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November 21, 2008 3:55 PM PST

How to handle ID fraud's youngest victims

by Robert Vamosi
  • 8 comments

kids coping

Sometime on October 14, a wide array of furniture and electronics were stolen from a commercial storage facility outside Phoenix. The building was used by the Arizona Early Intervention Program, which helps families of disabled children.

Two weeks ago, the state informed the parents of the nearly 40,000 children in the program that their personal information was potentially at risk for ID fraud. According to the Arizona Department of Economic Security (DES), a backup computer hard drive stolen from the facility was password protected. What happened next is where the controversy arises.

The DES and others in the media suggested that parents concerned about protecting their children against ID fraud seek a credit report for each child, and then put a credit freeze on the credit bureau accounts--advice that initially sounded right to me. But sources tell CNET News that such steps are wrong. Jay and Linda Foley, of the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC), said ordering a credit report that technically should not exist is one of the worst things you can do.

Making the problem worse
Julie Fergerson, vice president of emerging technologies at Debix, agreed. "If you actually try to order the credit file, there is a certain number of inquires against the Social Security number that the credit bureaus will create, potentially, on accident, a credit file."

Scott Mitic, CEO of TrustedID said, "according to the Federal Trade Commission, as many as 400,000 children may already be victims of identity theft. To make matters worse, the number of complaints has increased by 78 percent over the past several years, making children the fastest growing segment of identity theft victims." He said common warning signs include the receipt of pre-approved credit offers addressed to your child, calls from a collection agency in which the caller asks for your child by name, or notices addressed to your child from government or law enforcement agencies.

Scott Mitic, CEO of TrustedID

(Credit: TrustedID)

Tom Rusin, president and chief executive officer of Affinion's North America operation, said there should be no credit information being stored for minors with the credit bureaus, but they aren't consistent with what age they start to hold a child's information. "For some they hold information for those 18 and older, with one it's 16 and older. Technically speaking, if you are nine, your information should not reside within the credit bureaus at all."

When is too early?
Children today can get a Social Security number assigned within days of birth. That number may be valuable for setting up college saving accounts and obtaining company health benefits, but, in most cases, that Social Security number sits dormant for about 16 years. No loans. No credit cards. No activity. Pat Dane, chief revenue officer at MyPublicInfo, recommends "as soon as the parents give the kid a Social, they ought to start monitoring it."

"It's a squishy area," said Affinion's Rusin. "If they don't have credit files, how can you monitor them?"

So what kind of monitoring is right for a child?

Julie Fergerson, Debix VP of emerging technologies

(Credit: Debix)

Not traditional credit report monitoring, warned ITRC's Jay Foley. He said it's not a good idea to sign up a child for a service for something that does not exist.

Debix's Fergerson told me when ID theft occurs among children, a credit file is often attached to the child's Social Security number with the suspect's name and date of birth, not the child's. "So doing the traditional things like ordering fraud alerts or credit reports, any of those things, will always come back saying there is nothing there."

Mike Prusinski, VP of public affairs at LifeLock, agreed: "A credit freeze cannot be placed if there is nothing to attach it to. After multiple attempts or inquiries (in)to a child's identity, it is possible that a credit file might be created."

"And if there is a credit report file (associated with your child's name), it's not always necessarily identity theft said ITRC's Linda Foley. "It could be that someone mixed up the numbers and instead of a six they put down a five. And sometimes credit files are created because of clerical errors," said Foley. "The key here is to identify it early so we can fix it."

ID monitoring is not credit monitoring
Different from credit monitoring is ID monitoring. MyPublicInfo's Dane explained to me the subtle distinction between credit monitoring and ID monitoring, the difference that has ID fraud experts upset with those spreading misinformation about protecting children. Credit monitoring and ID monitoring are not the same, said Dane, who sent me some Gartner studies showing that credit report monitoring isn't as effective today as ID monitoring when it comes to detecting new account creation, for example. ID monitoring casts a much wider net, looking for activity on a person's Social Security number, not their credit report.

"If someone stole my son's Social," he said, "they could walk into Verizon, T-Mobile and open the easiest form of credit there is." Establishing a utility record is a common way that identity fraud is committed in part because it is harder to identify. Instead of appearing on a credit report, it needs a separate monitoring process, which the Gartner reports say most people do not have. When this so-called "synthetic ID theft" happens to a child, it may occur for years and years before the child needs to establish credit and finds he or she cannot.

"To me (new account creation) is probably one of the more egregious forms of identity theft," ITRC's Linda Foley said.

ITRC's Jay Foley said there's the classic story of a child in foster care. The kid turns 18 and the county ceases supervision. The kid then learns that through a bad parent or other means there's a bad credit report. "Instead of that child going on straight from high school to college, the child's going to end up working low- to pathetic-wage jobs while they clean up this mess in order to qualify for a student loan," he said.

Linda Foley, Founder, ID Theft Resource Center

(Credit: ITRC)

What should you do?
ITRC's Linda Foley said "if you think that your child may be a victim of identity theft, parents need to fire off registered letters to each of the credit bureaus. The letters should include the child's full name, Social Security number, parent (or guardian's) name and address. The letter should ask that a search for a credit file be done of the child's Social Security number since often the name will be different. Additionally you should include photocopies of your driver's license (proof of your identity), a copy of the child's birth certificate showing you as the parent, any guardianship papers if you are not the parent and a copy of the child's Social Security card. Foley said it sounds like a lot, but that's what photocopiers are for.

The credit bureaus want to make sure you are the correct person before releasing information, Foley said. If you are told, "there is no file," that is a good answer and you should stop worrying. Check again when the child is 16 and then again when they are 17 and getting ready to apply for a job or college. "If you are told there is a file, contact one of the non-profits or government agencies that provide victim assistance at no charge," she said. "They will walk you through the steps to clear the records."

LifeLock's Prusinski said for minors 15 and under, his company attempts to set a fraud alert every six months; for children over the age of 16, it is every 90 days, just like adults. "Although we cannot place an actual alert if no credit file exists, we still take the necessary measures to ensure that we are preventing a credit file from being fraudulently created." In addition LifeLock does a credit report audit for minors once a year through the FACT Act, which only requests a credit file. "This action has not created an inquiry because there is nothing with the bureaus that matches that SSN or name." Ideally, parents should then receive the letter that states "a credit file cannot be found." LifeLock also performs a separate Social Security Administration audit for children to see if work history exists.

Debix will also monitor a child's ID and if there's a problem, it'll clean it up. Recently Debix partnered with Javelin research to study the first 500 children who signed up with its service. Of that group, researchers found 5 percent had a pre-existing problem. Debix' Fergerson said that 12 percent were aged 5 and younger, and the average amount of each fraud was about $12,000. She said the company saw one case where a 17-year-old found his Social Security number had been used by a woman for the last two decades, a woman who had $325,000 in debt, a mortgage, and car loan. The 17-year-old boy was a few months away from applying for college. "This case, the woman wasn't a criminal, she legitimately believed the number was hers." Debix straightened out the accounts.

Trusted ID offers similar protection for minors.

Affinion's Rusin said his company is in the process of creating a children's identity protection program.

Tom Rusin, president and CEO of Affinion's North America operation

(Credit: Robert Vamosi / CNET)

Catch it young
Right now parents and guardians cannot put a block on a child's Social Security number saying it "belongs to a minor," but Linda Foley said she's working to make that a federal law by the end of 2009. Affinion's Rusin further suggested that the Social Security Agency also needs to improve its database so that two names don't show up under one SSN.

"The reality is if we catch it when they are young, before they are 16 or 17 years old," Linda Foley said, "it is far easier to take care of than if you were to become a victim of identity theft because we can show that anyone under the age of 18 who is still a minor, not emancipated, cannot be held legally responsible for any contract." Knowing early on makes it easier for parents to repair the situation, she said.

September 29, 2008 11:39 AM PDT

How 'carders' trade your stolen personal info

by Robert Vamosi
  • 11 comments

Debit cards and PINs are hot subjects on the criminal underground forums these days, Tom Rusin said on a recent visit to CNET. Rusin is president of North American operations at Affinion Group, a company that monitors the criminal underground for several thousand banking institutions by lurking in carder chat rooms.

"Carders" are the people who buy, sell, and trade online the credit card data stolen from phishing sites or from large data breaches at retail stores. Affinion is one of the largest identity protection companies in the world, with offices in more than a dozen countries. Over the years, it has provided a wealth of information to the U.S. Secret Service and the FBI. A few weeks ago, Affinion identified .Mac users who found themselves victims of a phishing scam.

While scrolling through posts in an online underground criminal forum on his laptop, Rosin explained that since "every American keeps some money in their savings account," unlike when stealing credit cards, debit cards grant thieves immediate access to cash. Next in demand are usernames and passwords because "most people use the same password on the sites they visit."

Carders once used to peddle their wares on forums as "novs" for novelties, as though they were only providing fake accounts or fake personal details for fun. What Rusin showed me on his laptop were bold, even boastful, claims. For example, today they're not just selling card information online.

Threaded among the expected offers in the forum were those for proxy servers and bullet-proof servers (i.e. servers that are unlikely to ever be shut down, located in parts of the world where the law often doesn't reach). These are used in conjunction with phishing kits (packages that help you create your own fake Bank of America page), which are also for sale.

Getting to this level of access hasn't been easy, Rusin said. Carders are tremendously paranoid. Often, just to gain access to the forums, you have to demonstrate your chops by providing up to five active credit card account numbers. It's the equivalent of gang or mafia initiation.

Rusin says Affinion has been establishing its carder credentials since 1998 or so. The company maintains several credit cards, accounts that they use to test their own software as well as that of others in spotting customer's data among the carder forums. For example, they once fed an Affinion credit card account to a carder, then watched at the bank's end of things.

There is a predictable pattern. Often, the purchasing individual will first run a $1 transaction through to a charity--say, the American Red Cross. Once that transaction is authenticated, a flood of illegal purchases cascade in until the card account is shut down.

That's an example of what's known in the business as an "account takeover," the most common use of personal information, in which thieves start using your active account without your knowledge. The effect is immediate, and the losses can be large.

The next most common use, according to Rusin, is new-account creation. This is a slower process, and it often involves establishing utility accounts. Here, the goal is to actually become someone else so that if it ever gets to court, a jury would have a tough time determining the difference between your transactions and another's.

New-account creation requires that a carder have a Social Security number, birth date, and mother's maiden name, at least. Rusin explained that a "full" profile will contain a name, address, SSN, date of birth, and driver's license number. Scrolling through the forum, he fingered one of the entries on the screen and said, "this guy's selling U.S. fulls for $20."

Rusin says that once a criminal has your Social Security number, it's possible to find the rest of that personal information from various sources via Google. "Typically, they're garnished from phishes but also from hacks. It's everything I need to become you. So your identity in the underground is worth about 20 bucks."

Terrorists, not just organized criminals, are interested in stealing and using your credit card history. That's one of the surprising trends identified by Rusin and documented in a Department of Justice white paper (PDF) that cites the increasing involvement of terrorist networks, starting as far back as the 2002 bombing in Bali.

In 2007, FaceTime Communications' Chris Boyd and Wayne Porter gave a standing room-only talk at the RSA Conference in San Francisco on a botnet they'd traced back to the Q8 Army sites.

Unfortunately, personal information is going to flow, admits Rusin. He cites high-profile data breaches such as the ones affecting ChoicePoint and the parent company of TJ Maxx.

Rusin, whose company also sells ID protection services, likens the process of ID monitoring to having a smoke detector: "You should have a smoke detector in your house." So the goal isn't necessarily to stop ID fraud, but rather to manage it.

In addition to having antivirus software and a firewall to protect our digital information on our desktops, it looks as if we now need ID protection for our real-world information as well.

You can hear more of my interview with Tom Rusin in this week's Security Bites podcast.

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About Defense in Depth

Covering computer viruses and computer crime, Robert Vamosi goes beyond the hype to provide you with expert interviews of the top security researchers, as well as offering the hands-on, nontechnical advice you'll need to stay safe online.

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