Did you know Facebook, cell phones and new operating systems could all be used to steal your personal information?
Identity thieves are increasingly creative as changing technology allows them new tools to pilfer; but with a little awareness and some creativity of your own you can keep your private information out of sticky fingers.
New ID theft tactics
TMI on social networking sites Did you know that information posted on fan-sites helped a man steal Will Smith’s identity back in 2005? The sites had seemingly innocuous tidbits like his legal name and date of birth.
What you can do Learn from Big Willie: tidbits like nicknames and pets’ names (if you use them as part of your passwords), addresses, phone numbers and your date-of-birth shouldn’t be public on your Facebook or Myspace page. It’ll be hard going a whole birthday without practical strangers wishing you a good one, but it’s a small price to pay to reduce your risk of ID theft.
Zero Day attacks Commonly written “0-day,” these babies are hackers’ ways of showing the big software companies how much more awesome they are, even without girlfriends. What happens is new software (like an operating system) falls into to hands of a hacker with something to prove, and he or she finds and exploits vulnerabilities to wreak havoc— and sometimes steal information from users’ files. Older Web browsers also occasionally fall prey to 0-day type attacks.
What you can do Keeping your Web browser (Internet Explorer, Firefox, etc.) updated is helpful, as some of the browser-based attacks are launched in countries like China, where the newest versions are not common. It is also best to wait a few months to purchase a recently released operating system, such as the new Windows 7—which hasn’t had any reported 0-day attacks as of this writing. Why wait? Because when an attack reveals a weak spot, software engineers develop a patch to fix it, giving you a stronger product. Read More…