The Borneo Post

How to protect your child from identity theft

- — WPBloomber­g

ALAN Brill has scoured computers for intelligen­ce left by Iraqi forces retreating from Kuwait. He has probed a bank in Bosnia suspected of funding ethnically targeted mass murder. He has investigat­ed the work of hackers who got inside the 2008 presidenti­al campaign networks of Barack Obama and John McCain.

What’s on his radar now? Your kids.

As school ends and camp and summer jobs begin, scammers are after their identities, which can be teased out from informatio­n given in applicatio­n forms. Identity thieves can use a child’s Social Security number, for example, to “apply for government benefits, open bank and credit card accounts, apply for a loan or utility service, or rent a place to live,” the Federal Trade Commission warns on its website.

“When you think about kids, in some ways they have the most vulnerable identities, but they are the ones people think about least,” said Brill, senior managing director for cybersecur­ity and investigat­ions at the New York security firm Kroll Inc. “It’s kind of a perfect storm for the bad guys.”

Kids’ identities, which can be used for a long time, are lowhanging fruit. In addition to requesting a Social Security number, camps, sports leagues, and potential employers may ask for insurance informatio­n and other personal data. Criminals see computer systems at camps and other extracurri­cular programmes as easy hacking targets. At the same time, there are no potentiall­y lucrative financial accounts tied to a child’s identity. So while the future damage can be incalculab­le, your child’s identity goes for cheap-US$10 to US$ 25 on the dark web, depending on supply and demand.

While it isn’t clear how many child identity thefts are committed annually in the US, said Brian Lapidus, who heads the identity theft and breach notificati­on practice at Kroll, “this is a big problem that we’re seeing an increase in year over year, as criminals get more savvy.”

Here, Brill and Lapidus offer their thoughts on child ID theft. Kroll and ID protection company LegalShiel­d launched a service called IDShield two years ago, but such services aren’t the first line of defence for concerned parents. It’s simple awareness of the problem.

Both men have quizzed their children’s or grandchild­ren’s camps on their cybersecur­ity practices and safeguards. You

When you think about kids, in some ways they have the most vulnerable identities, but they are the ones people think about least. It’s kind of a perfect storm for the bad guys. Brill, senior managing director for cybersecur­ity and investigat­ions at the New York security firm

can imagine it was a pretty good grilling. Here’s what to do and what to look out for in guarding your own young ones’ identities from thieves.

Question: How do you know if your child’s identity has been stolen?

Brill: Unfortunat­ely, in many cases you find out the hard way. Either your kid eventually applies for credit and discovers he has a terrible record, or someone has been using your kid’s informatio­n for something like W-2 fraud, using it to work when they’re not supposed to be working, and a year and a half later your child gets a nasty letter from the IRS saying, “We have W2’s for you, why haven’t you filed your taxes?”

Or your kid looks to go to college, and the college says, “Why do you owe AmEx US$ 37,000 on a credit card, and why do you have bankruptci­es on your record?” It can cause problems for the kid, and for parents who want to protect the identity of the of kid.

Another thing we see that is scary is how criminals use your kid’s identity to get medical services for another kid. In this age of electronic medical records, there may be a fairly extensive record under your child’s identity, but it has a different medical history and blood type than your child. The last thing you want is your child to go into the hospital and the medical staff to have the wrong informatio­n and your child’s medical history and all else.

Q: What are other areas in a child’s world where identity theft issues come up?

Brill: The internet of things. You probably read about the ( Bluetooth- enabled) doll marketed in Germany that recorded a lot more than you, as a parent, would want and sent it to a cloud-based server. A lot of American toy companies follow the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act about collecting informatio­n from kids. But when you get knockoff versions of a product that is imported, that’s not necessaril­y the case, and you don’t know where the data is going, how it is being protected, if it is being misused.

Lapidus: Also, you have teenagers applying for jobs in the summer, and with a lot of applicatio­ns, they have to give their Social Security number. You see job fairs where someone shows up saying, “I’m from X organisati­on,” and people fill out applicatio­ns. What the group really is is an identity theft ring. Say it’s a popular job fair, they get 500 applicatio­ns, they walk out the door and have 500 identities to sell on the dark web that day.

Q: In that case does a parent just tell their teen not to give out a Social Security number?

Lapidus: I’m not sure most 16year olds would say this ... but conceivabl­y they could say, “Hey, I’m really interested in working for your organisati­on, but I’m not going to give you my Social Security until you are ready to make an offer because my dad is in security, and I worry about things like that.” It’s about having that dialogue with your child and that sense of awareness.

Q: Where are the attacks coming from? What kind of cybercrimi­nals are we talking about?

Brill: In large part, the nation/ state actors don’t care about your kid’s data. If they were to get it, it would just be accidental along with other stuff they grabbed. The people who traffic in this data are mostly commercial cybercrimi­nals who are going to use it for credit frauds, medical frauds and W-2 frauds. It tends to be very low-level hackers who aren’t very creative. But if the place where the data is stored hasn’t done the security basics, they can run an attack that might get them that data. Q: Aside from warning your kids, what can a parent really do?

Brill: To me it’s really an area where parents can do quite a bit, but not if they aren’t thinking about it. The first question to ask a company is how are you protecting my kid’s data? If they look at you like you are speaking Klingon, that’s probably not a good thing. You want to hear something that makes sense, for them to have an answer that shows they have thought about it. They might tell you how they limit access to data, how they limit the informatio­n they collect. I’ve found that once you ask that question and listen to the answer, you tend to get a good or bad feeling about whether they are serious about it or not.It all comes down to consciousn­ess of this as an issue, asking questions, and in some cases working together.

Very often a camp will have a parents associatio­n, and if your kid was there last year and is going again this year, you probably have some contacts that you can speak with and take a little collective action.

 ??  ?? Kids’ identities, which can be used for a long time, are low-hanging fruit.
Kids’ identities, which can be used for a long time, are low-hanging fruit.

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