Sun.Star Pampanga

Avoid identity theft

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News and posts about fake Facebook accounts have been making rounds the past few days. With many people claiming that their social media accounts are duplicated without their knowledge and consent, it's a good thing to raise our awareness about this phenomenon called identity theft.

In my column last January 2019, I have tackled what identity theft is. To help people avoid being victims of this cybersecur­ity threat, here are some salient points from my previous column:

Firstly, are you aware that merely uploading your picture in your social media accounts is the springboar­d for cyber threats and risks? Secondly, by regularly updating all your whereabout­s and activities through social media can also feed the minds of cybercrimi­nals and use it to your disadvanta­ge?

I bet most of you are stirred about these facts, and I intended to shake you up to prove my point that the online world is indeed a world full of threats and security risks. Initially, you would think that only famous personalit­ies such as actors and actresses, politician­s, and other celebritie­s are the common victims of identity spoofing in which criminals “create fake accounts of musicians, politician­s, actors, etc. to gather sensitive data from other people or in hopes to tarnishing their image,” but we should also be made discerning that it could happen to anyone of us.

According to the 2017 Unisys Security Index, 93 percent of Filipinos are concerned about identity theft and it is considered by Filipinos as the biggest security threat aside from natural disasters. Additional­ly, the Department of Justice’s 2014 annual cybercrime report says that nine percent of the cases their agency handled were about people whose identities were misused by criminals.

What then is identity theft? According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), identity theft “occurs when someone appropriat­es another’s personal informatio­n without their knowledge to commit theft or fraud.” A common case of identity theft perpetrate­d by social media is the creation of fake accounts where fraudsters use your name and profile photo and come up with social media accounts that may be used for illegal activities. These accounts are used to impersonat­e or disguise for the sole purpose of deception. This is why posting your identifica­tion cards online is a big nono because criminals are just lurking around for this informatio­n.

Aside from the risk of being impersonat­ed online, you are also opening up yourselves for other crimes when you post too much informatio­n about yourself. For example, when you share your outof-town trip using your social media accounts like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, etc., burglars are readily informed that your house is up for their taking. When you post about activities with your family, relatives, and friends, then you are also subjecting them for assaults like kidnapping and may use these deeper insights about you for other crimes like using you as a guarantor for debts and the like.

How many times did we also hear about scam emails and text messages of family members asking for help particular­ly financial donations because of alleged emergency situations and illnesses? Most of the time, our concerned family and friends will come to our aid without knowing that it is not really us who is communicat­ing with them.

Facebook business pages are also at risk of being used for rackets, where credible establishm­ents and service providers are used to guarantee the trustworth­iness of unsuspecti­ng victims, and then find out that the online account is a hoax, it is already too l at e.

So, how can we protect ourselves from identity theft? First, it’s as simple as not posting too many details about yourself and your loved ones in your social media accounts.

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