Small Business Owners At Higher Risk For Identity Fraud
Small business owners suffered identity fraud at one-and-a-half times the rate of other adults in 2009, according to a study released in February by Javelin Strategy & Research. It seems that, due to the nature of small business – most of the work is done by a small number of people – often just one, the owner. It appears from the research that the susceptibility of small business to identity fraud may be attributed to the fact that small business owners often use personal accounts when making business transactions (and vice-versa) and make a larger number of transactions than typical adults. Since small businesses rarely employ a compliance department or on-site legal counsel to monitor its operations on a regular basis, incidents of identity fraud can sometimes go undiscovered for a longer period of time than for individuals or more complex, larger organizations.
The 2010 Identity Fraud Survey Report identified the information most likely to be accessed by identity thieves as:
• Full Name
• Physical Address
• Credit and Debit Card Information
• Health Insurance Information
• Social Security numbers
identity fraud are increasingly using stolen information to open new credit card accounts, on-line and e-mail payment accounts and cell-phone accounts.
Now for the good news.
Increased vigilance by consumers, businesses and government agencies appear to be having an impact on the problem. Many organizations, especially banks and financial institutions have started offering fraud monitoring services, which can sometimes detect account access and payment anomalies, as well as dispute resolution and identity fraud education programs, in most cases offering these services free to customers. Mobile banking solutions allow account monitoring, alerting customers in near-real-time of account activity and possible fraud. These partnerships and increased activism on the behalf of consumers resulted in consumer out of pocket costs dropping to an all-time low of $373 in 2009.
James Van Dyke, president and founder of Javelin Strategy & Research commented that, “… consumers are getting more aggressive in monitoring, detecting and preventing fraud with the help of technology and partnerships with financial institutions, government agencies and resolution services.”
In November 2009, Javelin Strategy and Research conducted telephone interviews with more than 5,000 U.S. consumers to identify and track the methods used by criminals and the impact of identity fraud on American consumers and businesses. Almost 4,800 U.S. adults, including 487 victims of identity fraud, were surveyed via a 50-question phone interview to gain insight into this crime, its effects on its victims, and how the survey findings can help consumers most effectively avoid becoming victims of identity fraud. The survey has been conducted each year since 2003.
Tags: identity fraud, Identity Theft, LifeLock
This entry was posted on Friday, August 20th, 2010 at 2:46 pm and is filed under Identity Theft. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.


