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10 Ways To Protect Yourself From Online
Identity Theft |
by:
Jim
Faller |
Identity
theft is becoming a bigger problem as more
and more people are making the internet
a bigger part of their lives. People who
are new to the online medium often fall
prey to 'phishing' or other internet identity
theft schemes. In many cases the 'phishing
party' uses your credit card to order goods
for them selves, in other cases they will
apply for credit cards, set up bank accounts,
and take advantage of your good credit rating.
Correcting these issues involves a lot of
time energy and stress, so here are ten
tips to help you from becoming a victim
of identity theft.
Use a disposable email account. Keep your
business or personal email account just
for business or personal communication.
If you are going to be making purchases
online, joining newsgroups, or subscribing
to mailing lists and ezines use a disposable
email account. There are many online free
accounts such as yahoo, hotmail or grail,
and most of them can interface with popular
email clients like outlook or outlook express.
Use one of them for all of your shopping
transactions.
Disguise your online identity. If your real
name in Mary Smith try to avoid using email
accounts with name like msmith@example.com
when dealing with people you don't know
and trust. If you were born in 1972 don't
chose msmith1972@example.com as your email
account.
Use different level passwords. Use one password
for your personal information, use another
for your business accounts and a third for
your disposable email accounts or mailing
lists you sign up for. Don't use sequential
passwords like password1 for personal use
password2 for business, and password 3 for
disposable accounts.
Use strong passwords. Don't use your birthdates,
year you were married, or your children's
birthdates. Avoid choosing passwords that
consist entirely of letters or numbers.
Also try to avoid using passwords that are
actual words. The best passwords are mnemonic
phrases like "my father ate three apples
for breakfast". Take the first letter of
each word and convert the number into numbers
and you end up with "mfa3a4b".
Rotate your passwords. You should change
your passwords every 6 to 12 months. If
you suspect your passwords have been compromised
change them as a safety precaution.
Use only one credit card for all of your
online purchases. If any of your other credit
cards have online transactions you know
they are fraudulent. If you see offline
purchases for your online credit card you
also know they are fraudulent.
Use credit cards instead of debit cards.
While many debit cards now offer online
purchase protection it's easier to dispute
fraudulent charges than to recover debit
card funds that have already been spent.
When you make purchases online make sure
your transactions are secure. In the address
bar you should see "https" and not "http".
There should also be small lock icon in
your browser. If this is your first purchase
from the company make sure the issuing company
is someone you have heard of like Verisign,
or Thawte.
Check a company's privacy policy. When you
make your first transaction make sure your
check the privacy policy, look for logos
from consumer groups like Trust-E and the
better business bureau. Click the logos
to make sure they are authentic.
Never open or fill out email requests for
you to update you account or credit card
settings via email. These are 'phishing'
scams people use to try and secure your
personal information. Many of them are growing
increasingly sophisticated and go to great
lengths to look exactly like the companies
website using their exact logo.
© Computers.6ln.com, All Rights Reserved.
About the author:
This article was written by Jim Faller of
http://computers.6ln.coma
website with information about viruses,
spyware, adware, backups, data recovery
and computer security.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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