
Fake Credit Report Sites: Cashing in on Your Personal
Information
You may have seen Web sites or received unsolicited email
offering credit reports, sometimes for free. Be aware that some of these online
operators may not actually provide credit reports, but may be using these sites
as a way to capture your personal information. From there, they may sell your
information to others who may use it commit fraud, including identity theft.
This is a variation on "phishing," also called "carding," a
high-tech scam that uses spam or fraudulent Web sites to deceive consumers into
disclosing their credit card numbers, bank account information, Social Security
numbers, passwords, and other sensitive information.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation's consumer
protection agency, urges you to take the following precautions when visiting
sites or responding to email that offer credit reports:
- If you get an email offering a credit report, don't reply or click on the
link in the email. Instead, contact the company cited in the email using a
telephone number or Web site address you know
to be genuine.
- Be skeptical of unsolicited email offering credit reports. Keep an eye out
for email from an atypical address, like
XYZ123@website.net, or an email address ending in a top level domain
other than .com, like .ru or .de.
- Check whether the company has a working telephone number and legitimate
address. You can check addresses at Web sites like
www.switchboard.com, and phone numbers through reverse lookup search
engines like
www.anywho.com.
- Check for misspellings and grammatical errors. Silly mistakes and sloppy
copy - for example, an area code that doesn't match an address - often are
giveaways that the site is a scam. Look at the company's Web address: is it a
real company's address or it is a misspelled version of a legitimate company's
Web address?
- Check to see whether the email address matches the Web site address. That
is, when you enter the company's Web address into the browser, does it go to
the sender's site or re-direct you to a different Web address? If it
re-directs you, that's a red flag that you should cease the transaction.
- Find out who owns the Web site by using a "Whois" search such as the
search at
www.networksolutions.com.
- Exit from any Web site that asks for unnecessary personal information,
like a Personal Identification Number (PIN) for your bank account, the
three-digit code on the back of your credit card, or your passport number and
issuing country. Legitimate sites don't ask for this information.
- All legitimate sites will want to verify who you are, and will respond to
an electronic request for a credit report by asking you for an additional
piece of information. If a site does not ask a follow-up question, the site is
almost certainly a fake.
- Use only secure Web sites. Look for the "lock" icon on the browser's
status bar, and the phrase "https" in the URL address for a Web site, to be
sure your information is secure during transmission. All real sites are
secure.
- Watch your mailbox and credit card statements: If you've responded to a
bogus site, you may never receive the credit report they offered for free. If
you paid one of these sites for a credit report, your credit card may never be
charged. If you find that you have unauthorized charges, contact your
financial institutions and credit card issuers immediately.
- Report suspicious activity to the FTC and the U.S. Secret Service. Send
the actual spam to the Los Angeles Electronic Crimes Task Force at
LA.ECTF.reports@usss.dhs.gov and to the FTC at
spam@uce.gov. If you believe you've been
scammed, file your complaint at
www.ftc.gov, and then
visit the FTC's Identity Theft Web site (www.consumer.gov/idtheft)
to learn how to minimize your risk of damage from identity theft.
For More Information and to Complain
For a copy of your credit report from the major credit
bureaus, contact:
- Equifax -
www.equifax.com; 1-800-685-1111
- Experian -
www.experian.com; 1-888-EXPERIAN (397-3742)
- TransUnion -
www.transunion.com; 1-800-888-4213
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent,
deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide
information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a
complaint or to get
free
information on consumer issues, visit
www.ftc.gov or call
toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters
Internet, telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related complaints into
Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to hundreds of civil
and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
Consumers also can call their local office of the
Secret Service.
Source:
The Federal Trade Commission