Valley City Times-Record

Identity-Fraud Report: Older Adults and Online Security Tips

AARP-sponsored research outlines steps to take to deter scammers

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By Katherine Skiba, AARP A drill sergeant would shout it out loudly and clearly: “People, strengthen your passwords!” That’s a critical recommenda­tion to emerge in an AARPsponso­red report that examined identity fraud and found more than 1 in 4 Americans were hit by identity fraud last year, when losses were almost $17 billion.

Identity fraud is worse than identity theft, which is when your personally identifiab­le informatio­n (PII) is stolen or compromise­d, as in a data breach. In identity fraud cases, a crook capitalize­s on that sensitive data and rips you off or commits a related offense, says Javelin Strategy & Research, which wrote the report after surveying 5,000 adults in the U.S.

‘Great digital migration’

With loads of shopping and other transactio­ns moving online, especially during the pandemic, what’s happening will eventually be described as the “great digital migration,” the report says.

And 2019’s estimated $16.9 billion in losses could climb as consumers adapt to a “digitally infused lifestyle.”

Today, people want contactles­s, safe and faster personal and financial transactio­ns and, according to the report, the good news is that desire will drive commercial innovation. The bad news: Forecasts call for “increased criminal acts that target consumers and monetize their personally identifiab­le data,” says the report, entitled “Identity Fraud in Three Acts: A Con

sumer Guide.” The report focuses on adults 55 and older.

Create an action plan What to do? Create an action plan to keep safe — and stronger passwords are a good start. It’s risky for a consumer to use an identical signon name — coupled with the same, weak password — across multiple socialmedi­a accounts, bank accounts and e-commerce sites, says Javelin’s John

Buzzard, who wrote the report.

“Once the criminal cracks the formula, so to speak, and they take over your account, they just start to take over everything because you’ve made it very, very easy for them,” says Buzzard, the lead analyst for fraud and security at Javelin, based in Pleasanton, California.

Here’s more for your

action plan:

1. Use a password manager tool or app. Password managers such

as LastPass or Bitwarden store and protect passwords using strong encryption. Both offer free and for-a-fee services and you can find them in the App Store or online.

2. Secure personal payments with digital wallets such as Apple Pay and Google Pay. They’re standard features on most smartphone­s and retailers accept them widely. Wallets use encryption to prevent payment card informatio­n from being shared in the open with merchants.

3. Lock your payment cards. Many financial institutio­ns offer card controls that manage how and where payments can be made. Consumers also can decide if they want to limit amounts spent, restrict spending to geographic­al areas or prevent card use at certain types of merchants, such as jewelry stores.

4. Enable two-step authentica­tion to access digital accounts. Onetime access codes make it difficult for criminals to take over sensitive

email, financial and mobile phone accounts.

5. Hang up on strangers, and independen­tly verify everything. Do not speak to people you do not know who contact you about sensitive, urgent or threatenin­g personal business matters.

6. Write down important telephone numbers and keep them in a safe place. Criminals are now posting fake customerse­rvice numbers online. It’s safer to make a list of trusted companies

so you may reach them quickly.

7. Safeguard every computer device with stronger security methods. Mobile phones, laptops and tablets typically contain sensitive PII, so access to every digital device should be secured with complex passwords and screen locks that use a fingerprin­t or facial recognitio­n.

8. Install anti-malware protection on all digital devices: laptops, mobile phones, personal computers and tablets.

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