Register/Login
My current location: city | Change Location

Legal Technology Center - Articles, White Papers, Press Releases

Software | E-Discovery | Hardware | Communications | Networking & Storage
Over 1,000 Cases Now Included in K&L Gates' E-Discovery Case Database
Electronic Discovery Law, 07/03/08
We are pleased to announce that our searchable case database now contains over 1,000 e-discovery cases from state and federal jurisdictions, with new cases being added every week. Now more than ever, our database is an excellent source of information on developing e-discovery case law around the country.

Remove Hidden Metadata from Word Documents
TechnoEsq, 07/02/08
Unfortunately, metadata has curtailed one of the courtesies attorneys in litigation formerly exhibited through providing discovery requests in an electronic format so that opposing counsel didn’t have to have his assistant re-type your requests when answering discovery.

Is E-Mail Evidence Less Persuasive?
EDD Update, 06/20/08
I suppose it says something about your status in life if you are pleased or appalled to see Wall Street titans with eight-figure incomes taken away in handcuffs and booked. It's a bit like the lawyers in Qualcomm v Broadcom: we can identify with them until the lying starts, and then we no longer see ourselves in their moccasins.

Is Identity Fraud Decreasing?

FindLaw

By Eric Sinrod, 

It seems that we constantly are hearing horror stories about the perils of rampant identity fraud. A recent survey report seeks to set the record straight, however, with findings that identity fraud in the United States is actually dropping.

Javelin Strategy & Research has just released its 2007 Identity Fraud Survey Report. While identifying significant risk differentiators between age and income demographics, the report highlights an important reduction in fraudulent new account openings using private information. Interestingly, the report also documents that more fraud happens via physical channels, such as in-person transactions and by the direct theft of personal data by individuals, rather than taking place online.


Let's drill down a bit into some of the critical findings of the report:

  • Identity fraud is declining in the United States - down an estimated 12% from the prior year - translating into total fraud reduction of approximately $6.4 billion. Indeed, about 500,000 fewer adults in the United States were victim of identity fraud in 2006 than 2005. It is estimated that 3.7% of Americans were victims in 2006, as opposed to 4.0% in 2005. Losses from identity fraud are calculated at $49.3 billion in 2006, down from $55.7 billion in 2005.

Why the decline? Factors cited are better consumer education and awareness, and the increased usage of online banking and financial sites that enable people to monitor their accounts more frequently.

  • Fraudulent new account openings have dropped from the prior year, with average fraud amounts also decreasing significantly. Such fraud has dropped from 1.5% for respondents for the prior year to a current rate of 1.0%. Plus, when fraudulent accounts are opened, victims are detecting the fraud more often using online channels, such as the viewing of statements. In so doing, average fraud amounts are dropping from $10,000 the year before to $7,260 now.

Here, too, education, awareness and online monitoring are attributed for the improvement.

  • Young adults are at the highest risk for identity fraud. This supposedly is because adults between the ages of 18 and 24 are least likely to take routine but important safeguards like shredding documents and implementing antivirus software and firewalls. This leads to more than 5% of them becoming victims of identity fraud, in comparison to an overall adult fraud rate of 5.3%. Strikingly, more than 50% of young adult victims know their perpetrators, which include their friends, neighbors and co-employees, contrasted to a rate of just 23% for all adults.

Thus, contrary to the notion that tech savvy young adults are ahead of the game in the new information age, the report proves this not to be the case when it comes to identity fraud.

  • Americans earning less are least likely to be victims. Of those earning $15,000 or less, only 2.8% report identity fraud, compared to 7.3% who earn more than $150,000. However, when people with lower incomes are victimized, the misuse lasts twice as long and the fraud is more difficult to uncover - taking an average 70% longer to detect than fraud in higher income populations.

The results of identity fraud differ in the income segments. People who earn more than $150,000 are more than twice as likely to move from paper statements and bills to electronic alternatives in an effort to ward off fraud. Lower income victims, on the other hand, are more than twice as likely to reduce their overall spending.

At the end of the day, the report certainly paints an illuminating picture in one very important respect. Namely, it debunks the notion that online transactions and activities increase the incidence of identity fraud when contrasted to physical interactions. Indeed, the report suggests that electronic alternatives have helped to protect potential victims of identity fraud.

In terms of practical advice to prevent unauthorized access to personal information, the report offers the following advice:

  • Only carry credit and identification cards that actually are used; do not carry a social security card, and lock personal information and sensitive documents in a secure location.
  • Protect accounts by adding difficult to discern PINs and passwords to them. Have PINs and passwords in a secure location, and change them frequently.
  • Replace paper invoices, statements and checks with electronic versions; utilize automatic payroll deposits.
  • Do not provide personal information over the phone unless you placed the call and are certain as to whom you are speaking; do not respond to automated phone messages or emails requesting you to call a number to resolve an account issue.
  • When responding to an email from a business with which you have an account, do not link to the business site from the email; go to the business site independently using your search engine and by typing in the URL.
  • Install and regularly update firewall, anti-spyware and anti-virus and browser security software on computers.
  • Shred all sensitive documents prior to disposal.
  • Use a secure mailbox for incoming mail.

Hopefully, with education and awareness such as this, we will continue to see identity fraud drop in the coming years.

Eric Sinrod is a partner in the San Francisco office of Duane Morris LLP (http://www.duanemorris.com) where he focuses on litigation matters of various types, including information technology and intellectual property disputes.  His Web site is http://www.sinrodlaw.com and he can be reached at ejsinrod@duanemorris.com.  To receive a weekly email link to Mr. Sinrod’s columns, please send an email to him with Subscribe in the Subject line.

This column is prepared and published for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice.  The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the author’s law firm or its individual partners.

Software


© 2007 FindLaw

Sponsored Links

Software

Featured Products,
Articles, Dictionary,
Press Releases, Resources

E-Discovery

Featured Products,
Articles, Dictionary,
Press Releases, Resources

Hardware

Featured Products,
Articles, Dictionary,
Press Releases, Resources

Communications

Featured Products,
Articles, Dictionary,
Press Releases, Resources

Networking & Storage

Featured Products,
Articles, Dictionary,
Press Releases, Resources
Copyright © 1994-2008 FindLaw, a Thomson Reuters Business Help | Site Map | Contact Us | Media Kit | About Us | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy