| Casual Articles |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Legal > Identity Theft > Identity Theft - Nine Threats & Nine Steps To Protection |
|
Casual Articles - Identity Theft - Nine Threats & Nine Steps To Protection
Some Things in Business Demand Total Expertise checks, calls to the bank, would not work for at least a matter of days causing tremendous hardship and a ripple effect from no gas to “I simply have to take this baby food.”On any given day I am constantly digging for the latest and greatest information on Google as it relates to search engine marketing, specifically search engine advertising (aka “pay-per-click” or “ppc” advertising), and other related industry news. During the course of doing this, every now and again I click the sponsored links. It never ceases to amaze me just how many businesses try to navigate the uncharted waters of a pay-per-click advertising campaign themselves. I applaud their efforts however in most cases, they have no clue what they are doing. Case in point: you click on an ad that advertises a specific product and you are taken directly to the homepage of the advertiser’s website. I don’t know about you but to me (as a consumer looking for something), that’s irritating.Rule number 1 of pay-per-click advertising: Never have your text ad pointing directly to the homepage of your website especially if you are trying to sell something. Only in very (and I mean very) rare cases would you do this. When someone clicks on your ad, you want them to be taken to one of two places. Either a precise landing page that was created specifically for the product or service you are promoting with a link to your website OR to a specific page on your website, pointing them again in the direction of the specific product or service your text ad was promoting. But NEVER take them to the main homepage of your site! Rather than focusing on what makes sense to you, (and it might have Consider for a moment some of the potential social effects from this identity theft problem. What if citizens developed a lack of confidence in our credit card and monetary system causing economic upheaval similar to what we saw in the “Great Depression?” I know this sounds radical, but what if you couldn’t trust your identity to anyone anymore? What if you feared that your money, your identity was going to be stolen? It’s not unthinkable that you would store your money under your mattress at home or in a safe in the closet rather than possibly losing it to identity theft. If millions of people lost faith in our monetary system and the ability to keep their identity safe and then took all of t Which Uranium Development Companies Will Be The First To Commence Operations? The Bad News: Identity theft is escalating at a torrid pace. It has become one of the country’s top problems. The bad guys are finding more ways to steal YOUR identity.An increasingly popular method of uranium mining has emerged. It is called in situ leach mining (ISL), or solution mining, and about 16 percent of the world's uranium production is mined this way. By injecting carbonated water (sodium bicarbonate is common, although hydrogen peroxide has been used) into a uranium orebody, mining can be done with minimal impact to the environment. They key to a safer, more environmentally friendly uranium mining is keeping the radon gas away from humans. Underground, and even open pit, mining had been hazardous until miners realized the radon gas had to be ventilated out of the mine. ISL mining contains the entire uranium operation, and when all the necessary precautions are followed, eliminates the hazards found in previous uranium mining.ISL mining was first used in Wyoming, pioneered by Don Snow in 1957, a geologist at the Lucky Mc mine in Wyoming. ISL mining began as a version of heap leach mining, borrowed from gold miners who were eager to mine sub-economic grades of gold more profitably. The same principle applied to uranium mining, and its use was exported to Australia, Slovakia and Kazakhstan, where the geological formations in those countries also make solution mining possible. The sandstones of Wyoming are porous, and can hold economic grades of uranium. Under such geological conditions, ISL mining thrives and is a useful method to provide uranium, which is the fuel source for nuclear reactors. ISL mining costs can drop below $20/pound. The Good News: You can take control of the situation, become both reactive and proactive guarding yourself against identity theft. Identity Theft Is Spreading Faster Than The Worst Case Of The Flu! First, let’s understand just how bad identity theft has become in this country: · The Federal Trade Commission says that there is an underground market for credit card numbers, social security numbers and ID documents – organized gangs or web mobs use and sell these documents for as little as $10 each. Some of these groups contain thousands of members. The amount of goods and services purchased with fraudulently obtained personal identity exceeded 52-billion dollars in 2004. · US Department of Justice states identity theft is affecting millions of households in the U.S. each year. The cost is estimated to be six-point-four billion per year. According to the FTC, an estimated 10 million adults become victims of identity theft each year. · The Department of Justice goes on to say that the most common misuse of identity was through credit cards, accounting for 50 percent of all identity theft. Next in line were banking and other types of accounts at 25 percent, personal information was 15 percent, and a combination of several types of identity theft was at 12 percent. The average loss for each identity theft was $1,290.00. Two-thirds of those surveyed said the theft cost them money despite credit card coverage. · A recent State of the Net survey by Consumer Reports which covered more than 2000 households with Internet Access projects that American consumers lost more than eight-billion dollars over the last two years to viruses, spyware and various scams. The report also shows consumers face a one-in-three chance of becoming a “cyber victim” about the same as last year. It goes on to say that consumers lost $630 million over the past two years to e-mail scams. · The average person today suffers through two or more “incidents” with their computer each year - the computer slows to a crawl, crashes altogether, viruses or spyware take over systems and more. It’s getting worse as computers become more complex and as we do more with them. So, Who Is At Risk For Identity Theft? According to the Department of Justice there are three groups that are most at risk for identity theft: young adults 18 to 24, adults who earn $75,000 per year or more and households in urban and suburban area. Interesting to note that about five percent of adults who earn $75,000 or more a year are hit with identity theft. The continued growth of online fraud and identity theft are putting an enormous strain on the existing infrastructure for the Internet as well as our social structure. For example, the banking community has been complacent about security upgrades required by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council. They report that every bank in the country has not complied with their guidelines set for now. In an article titled, “U.S. Banks Complacent Toward Identity Theft Solution,” by PR Web, the single largest national security threat is a terrorist attack on our banking system. An attack aimed simultaneously at millions of user names and passwords within banks would shut down our banking system. This would instantly shut down banks worldwide. Credit/debit cards, checks, calls to the bank, would not work for at least a matter of days causing tremendous hardship and a ripple effect from no gas to “I simply have to take this baby food.” Consider for a moment some of the potential social effects from this identity theft problem. What if citizens developed a lack of confidence in our credit card and monetary system causing economic upheaval similar to what we saw in the “Great Depression?” I know this sounds radical, but what if you couldn’t trust your identity to anyone anymore? What if you feared that your money, your identity was going to be stolen? It’s not unthinkable that you would store your money under your mattress at home or in a safe in the closet rather than possibly losing it to identity theft. If millions of people lost faith in our monetary system and the ability to keep their identity safe and then took all of th Page Optimization Techniques - Part II epartment of Justice states identity theft is affecting millions of households in the U.S. each year. The cost is estimated to be six-point-four billion per year. According to the FTC, an estimated 10 million adults become victims of identity theft each year.One of the basics of seo is that of page optimization, and there are a number of things that you can do to help improve your on page optimization to help increase your search engine rankings.Keyword DensityWords that appear more than once and are related to your website or page is called keyword density. Search engines will use this information in addition with meta tags to determine your placement in a search engine.For instance, if you ran a bicycle accessories website, you could target the keyword “bicycle accessories”. Write an article targeted around this keyword but don’t over do it. Search engines can detect spamming techniques.Fresh ContentNothing beats fresh content. You should update your pages at least once per week. If you have to, hire a writer to update your pages for you. Stick to topics that go with the overall theme of your website. If you go off track, you may lose the listing you were aiming for.The Don’ts- Don’t think that you can stuff keywords on a webpage. Search engines can detect this and will label your site as spam.- Don’t make your keyword the same color as your webpage. This is also considered spam.The Dos- Do write content related to your website and overall theme.- Do monitor your stats over a period of each month, checking at least once per month and adjust your content to what people are searching for.Search engine optimization is a process that should be monitored over a · The Department of Justice goes on to say that the most common misuse of identity was through credit cards, accounting for 50 percent of all identity theft. Next in line were banking and other types of accounts at 25 percent, personal information was 15 percent, and a combination of several types of identity theft was at 12 percent. The average loss for each identity theft was $1,290.00. Two-thirds of those surveyed said the theft cost them money despite credit card coverage. · A recent State of the Net survey by Consumer Reports which covered more than 2000 households with Internet Access projects that American consumers lost more than eight-billion dollars over the last two years to viruses, spyware and various scams. The report also shows consumers face a one-in-three chance of becoming a “cyber victim” about the same as last year. It goes on to say that consumers lost $630 million over the past two years to e-mail scams. · The average person today suffers through two or more “incidents” with their computer each year - the computer slows to a crawl, crashes altogether, viruses or spyware take over systems and more. It’s getting worse as computers become more complex and as we do more with them. So, Who Is At Risk For Identity Theft? According to the Department of Justice there are three groups that are most at risk for identity theft: young adults 18 to 24, adults who earn $75,000 per year or more and households in urban and suburban area. Interesting to note that about five percent of adults who earn $75,000 or more a year are hit with identity theft. The continued growth of online fraud and identity theft are putting an enormous strain on the existing infrastructure for the Internet as well as our social structure. For example, the banking community has been complacent about security upgrades required by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council. They report that every bank in the country has not complied with their guidelines set for now. In an article titled, “U.S. Banks Complacent Toward Identity Theft Solution,” by PR Web, the single largest national security threat is a terrorist attack on our banking system. An attack aimed simultaneously at millions of user names and passwords within banks would shut down our banking system. This would instantly shut down banks worldwide. Credit/debit cards, checks, calls to the bank, would not work for at least a matter of days causing tremendous hardship and a ripple effect from no gas to “I simply have to take this baby food.” Consider for a moment some of the potential social effects from this identity theft problem. What if citizens developed a lack of confidence in our credit card and monetary system causing economic upheaval similar to what we saw in the “Great Depression?” I know this sounds radical, but what if you couldn’t trust your identity to anyone anymore? What if you feared that your money, your identity was going to be stolen? It’s not unthinkable that you would store your money under your mattress at home or in a safe in the closet rather than possibly losing it to identity theft. If millions of people lost faith in our monetary system and the ability to keep their identity safe and then took all of t Palm Seeds Sales Drag and Drop Shopping Cart merican consumers lost more than eight-billion dollars over the last two years to viruses, spyware and various scams. The report also shows consumers face a one-in-three chance of becoming a “cyber victim” about the same as last year. It goes on to say that consumers lost $630 million over the past two years to e-mail scams.I sell mainly palm seeds from my site in various sized packets, each species has a varying limited shelf-life and of-course the seeds come in various sizes, weights and prices.I guess the first criticism would be Why drag and drop? Well, it's my opinion that customers to a shopping site should be able to use it just like they would in a real shop, where they put the items in the cart themselves and can always be able to glance at what they've got in there.Let me talk you through a few things that might not be obvious at first; Normally you would paginate the results onto 10 or so products per page to save download time. Well, I too have done it for that reason but the main reason it is necessary with this is because you really don't want to be dragging products off the page and you also want to have the cart in view all the time.Here's the shopping cart page to view: http://www.trebrown.com/shop/arecaceae.phpRather than have several sizes of the same product as several items I've made it so that the shopper can configure the packet size themselves before dropping in the cart. This means that every product item box must carry all the the different configurations with it. The next page in the checkout process calculates the total shipping cost to the chosen destination so that customers can pay for their shopping and delivery in real time. Therefore, the weight per 1000 seeds is sent with t · The average person today suffers through two or more “incidents” with their computer each year - the computer slows to a crawl, crashes altogether, viruses or spyware take over systems and more. It’s getting worse as computers become more complex and as we do more with them. So, Who Is At Risk For Identity Theft? According to the Department of Justice there are three groups that are most at risk for identity theft: young adults 18 to 24, adults who earn $75,000 per year or more and households in urban and suburban area. Interesting to note that about five percent of adults who earn $75,000 or more a year are hit with identity theft. The continued growth of online fraud and identity theft are putting an enormous strain on the existing infrastructure for the Internet as well as our social structure. For example, the banking community has been complacent about security upgrades required by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council. They report that every bank in the country has not complied with their guidelines set for now. In an article titled, “U.S. Banks Complacent Toward Identity Theft Solution,” by PR Web, the single largest national security threat is a terrorist attack on our banking system. An attack aimed simultaneously at millions of user names and passwords within banks would shut down our banking system. This would instantly shut down banks worldwide. Credit/debit cards, checks, calls to the bank, would not work for at least a matter of days causing tremendous hardship and a ripple effect from no gas to “I simply have to take this baby food.” Consider for a moment some of the potential social effects from this identity theft problem. What if citizens developed a lack of confidence in our credit card and monetary system causing economic upheaval similar to what we saw in the “Great Depression?” I know this sounds radical, but what if you couldn’t trust your identity to anyone anymore? What if you feared that your money, your identity was going to be stolen? It’s not unthinkable that you would store your money under your mattress at home or in a safe in the closet rather than possibly losing it to identity theft. If millions of people lost faith in our monetary system and the ability to keep their identity safe and then took all of t Turning Customer Mistakes Into Raving Fans to note that about five percent of adults who earn $75,000 or more a year are hit with identity theft.When you make a mistake with a customer, should you write them off as lost -- never to return again?Nope. There have been numerous studies which show that a customer who has had a problem and gotten it resolved in a timely manner and to their satisfaction is a more loyal customer than one who has never had a problem.I've found that to be true too. One of my biggest fans is a customer who started out on slippery footing. She's been a repeat customer for three years now.From a situation that could have been a disaster to one that ended up being great, our response as business people gives us the control to turn that customer into a "raving fan."So how do you turn a lemony situation into lemonade in your business?- Use the human touch. Pick up the phone and connect. Don't try to tame a rough situation using email. You'll lose.- Offer a special gift or extra compensation on your product or service. That could be a valuable add on product or a free month's service.- Ask the customer what it would take to make them happy. You'll find that it's normally something you can accommodate very easily. The continued growth of online fraud and identity theft are putting an enormous strain on the existing infrastructure for the Internet as well as our social structure. For example, the banking community has been complacent about security upgrades required by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council. They report that every bank in the country has not complied with their guidelines set for now. In an article titled, “U.S. Banks Complacent Toward Identity Theft Solution,” by PR Web, the single largest national security threat is a terrorist attack on our banking system. An attack aimed simultaneously at millions of user names and passwords within banks would shut down our banking system. This would instantly shut down banks worldwide. Credit/debit cards, checks, calls to the bank, would not work for at least a matter of days causing tremendous hardship and a ripple effect from no gas to “I simply have to take this baby food.” Consider for a moment some of the potential social effects from this identity theft problem. What if citizens developed a lack of confidence in our credit card and monetary system causing economic upheaval similar to what we saw in the “Great Depression?” I know this sounds radical, but what if you couldn’t trust your identity to anyone anymore? What if you feared that your money, your identity was going to be stolen? It’s not unthinkable that you would store your money under your mattress at home or in a safe in the closet rather than possibly losing it to identity theft. If millions of people lost faith in our monetary system and the ability to keep their identity safe and then took all of t Bill That Provides Tax Relief Signed By The President checks, calls to the bank, would not work for at least a matter of days causing tremendous hardship and a ripple effect from no gas to “I simply have to take this baby food.”A bill that promises to provide tax relief for middle income tax payers was recently passed by Congress and signed by the president. The bill will also help U.S. troops serving overseas, by providing deductions for both mortgage insurance premium and college tuition.While not perfect, says Congressman Joseph Crowley, this tax cut bill also provides relief and incentives for families owning a home, sending their kids to college and trying to make ends meet.According to Crowley, the home ownership affordability provision will give a one-year benefit in 2006 and 2007, and that will allow anyone with a gross income of $100,000 or less per year to deduct mortgage insurance premiums on their federal income tax returns.The middle-income families' tax cut also provides a one-year opportunity for middle class tax payers to avoid seeing a huge increase in their income taxes under a provision of law known as the AMT (Alternative Minimum Tax). This is a tax placed on working people that Crowley and the Democrats have promised to eliminate in the next Congress.Another one-year benefit for 2007 will allow military personnel to use combat pay (which is tax free) in the calculation that determines earned income. This will allow some personnel to qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit, and others to increase the credit they receive.Last but not least, the college tuition tax deduction provision makes higher learning more affordable for one yea Consider for a moment some of the potential social effects from this identity theft problem. What if citizens developed a lack of confidence in our credit card and monetary system causing economic upheaval similar to what we saw in the “Great Depression?” I know this sounds radical, but what if you couldn’t trust your identity to anyone anymore? What if you feared that your money, your identity was going to be stolen? It’s not unthinkable that you would store your money under your mattress at home or in a safe in the closet rather than possibly losing it to identity theft. If millions of people lost faith in our monetary system and the ability to keep their identity safe and then took all of their money home where they believe it would be safe, what would happen then? We generally can’t control what happens outside of our personal environment, what happens at a bank, corporation or the government seems so far out of reach. There are, however, steps that we can take that will give us a better chance of protecting our personal information. The first step is identifying the threats and then taking steps to protect ourselves. Below, I have identified nine identity theft threats and nine steps to protect our identity in today’s society. Nine Threats To Your Identity Here are nine of the most popular ways for thieves to steal your identity. Some of these are personally preventable and others are out of our control: 1. Stolen Company Data. Your personal information is stored on computers at stores where you shop, at your insurance company, your accountant, and more. It almost seems like a common occurrence where a company is hacked into and their customer’s information is stolen. This happens so often now that the crimes are rarely reported and don’t make the front page anymore. 2. Social Engineering. Identity Thieves are very clever. They will invent any way possible to fool you into giving your identity out. It’s called social engineering because the thief uses common social situations to get the information they want. Like a seemingly innocent phone call supposedly from your credit card company asking for your personal information. 3. Dumpster Diving. Identity thieves get a lot of their victims’ information out of garbage cans and recycle bins from old credit card statements and other personal documents thrown out carelessly. 4. Mail Theft. Your mail can contain valuable information: bills, banking information, credit cards, investments and more. Personal mail can often be stolen right from a mailbox. 5. Financial Account Hijacking. Once a thief has your personal information they can take over your personal accounts. You might not know about their activity for months. 6. Credit Card Magnetic Strip Theft. These clever crooks have tools to steal information off the magnetic strips on your credit card. 7. Discarded Computers. Your old computer really can tell stories. Even though you erased your hard drive crooks have tools to reclaim your personal information and use it against you. 8. Spyware and Viruses on Computers. You may not be familiar with the term ‘malware.’ It’s a term that covers all of the hacker tools that can cause harm on your computer. These tools include spyware, keylogger tools, Trojan horses and more. 9. E-mail and Internet Scams. Cyber thieves are getting more and more creative using scams like Phishing, Pharming and fancy come-ons to entice you to give them your personal information. There Are Four Ways You Can Approach Protecting Your Identity... One way is to do nothing and hope that identity thieves don’t harm you. Second, you can be reactive. Reactive simply means that you are responding to all the material that comes your way. You are checking your credit card and bank statements to make sure nothing peculiar is on them. And if you do find something strange you contact your bank or credit card company immediately. Reactive also means that you are checking your credit report when you apply for credit or a loan. Third, you can be proactive. A proactive approach is a more aggressive way of protecting yourself against the bad guys. You are co
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Performance Appraisals: Nightmares or Sweet Dreams Human Resource Communication Pays Off Thinking Of Outsourcing Your Web Site Management
|