Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted August 13, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted August 13, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Hackers may have stolen the Social Security numbers of every *********. How to protect yourself About four months after a notorious hacking group claimed to have stolen an extraordinary amount of sensitive personal information from a major data broker, a member of the group has reportedly released most of it for free on an online marketplace for stolen personal data. The breach, which includes Social Security numbers and other sensitive data, could power a raft of identity theft, ****** and other *******, said Teresa Murray, consumer watchdog director for the U.S. Public Information Research Group. “If this in fact is pretty much the whole dossier on all of us, it certainly is much more concerning” than prior breaches, Murray said in an interview. “And if people weren’t taking precautions in the past, which they should have been doing, this should be a five-alarm wake-up call for them.” According to a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up filed in U.S. District Court in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the hacking group USDoD claimed in April to have stolen personal records of 2.9 billion people from National Public Data, which offers personal information to employers, private investigators, staffing agencies and others doing background checks. The group offered in a forum for hackers to sell the data, which included records from the ******* States, Canada and the ******* Kingdom, for This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , a cybersecurity expert said in a post on X. The lawsuit was reported by This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Last week, a purported member of USDoD identified only as Felice told the hacking forum that they were offering “ This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up ,” according to a screenshot taken by BleepingComputer. The information consists of about 2.7 billion records, each of which includes a person’s full name, address, date of birth, Social Security number and phone number, along with alternate names and birth dates, Felice claimed. Read more: This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up National Public Data didn’t respond to a request for comment, nor has it formally notified people about the alleged breach. It has, however, been telling people who contacted it via email that “we are aware of certain third-party claims about consumer data and are investigating these issues.” In that email, the company also said that it had “purged the entire database, as a whole, of any and all entries, essentially opting everyone out.” As a result, it said, it has deleted any “non-public personal information” about people, although it added, “We may be required to retain certain records to comply with legal obligations.” Several news outlets that focus on cybersecurity have looked at portions of the data Felice offered and said they appear to be real people’s actual information. If the leaked material is it what it’s claimed to be, here are some of the risks posed and the steps you can take to protect yourself. The threat of ID theft The ***** purports to provide much of the information that banks, insurance companies and service providers seek when creating accounts — and when granting a request to change the password on an existing account. A few key pieces appeared to be missing from the hackers’ haul. One is email addresses, which many people use to log on to services. Another is driver’s license or passport photos, which some governmental agencies rely on to verify identities. Still, Murray of PIRG said that bad actors could do “all kinds of things” with the leaked information, the most worrisome probably being to try to take over someone’s accounts — including those associated with their bank, investments, insurance policies and email. With your name, Social Security number, date of birth and mailing address, a fraudster could create fake accounts in your name or try to talk someone into resetting the password on one of your existing accounts. “For somebody who’s really suave at it,” Murray said, “the possibilities are really endless.” It’s also possible that ********** could use information from previous data breaches to add email addresses to the data from the reported National Public Data *****. Armed with all that, Murray said, “you can cause all kinds of chaos, commit all kinds of *******, steal all kinds of money.” Read more: This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up How to protect yourself Data breaches have been so common over the years, some security experts say sensitive information about you is almost certainly available in the dark corners of the internet. And there are a lot of people capable of finding it; VPNRanks, a website that rates virtual private network services, estimates that 5 million people a day will access the dark web through the anonymizing TOR browser, although only a portion of them will be up to no good. If you suspect that your Social Security number or other important identifying information about you has been leaked, experts say you should put a freeze on your credit files at the three major credit bureaus, This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . You can do so for free, and it will prevent ********** from taking out loans, signing up for credit cards and opening financial accounts under your name. The catch is that you’ll need to remember to lift the freeze temporarily if you are obtaining or applying for something that requires a credit check. Placing a freeze can be done online or by phone, working with each credit bureau individually. PIRG cautions never to do so in response to an unsolicited email or text purporting to be from one of the credit agencies — such a message is probably the work of a scammer trying to dupe you into revealing sensitive personal information. For more details, check out PIRG’s This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . You can also sign up for This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and the dark web to guard against identity theft, typically for a fee. If your data is exposed in a breach, the company whose network was breached will often provide one of these services for free for a year or more. As important as these steps are to stop people from opening new accounts in your name, they aren’t much help protecting your existing accounts. Oddly enough, those accounts are especially vulnerable to identity thieves if you haven’t signed up for online access to them, Murray said — that’s because it’s easier for thieves to create a login and password while pretending to be you than it is for them to ****** your existing login and password. Read more: This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Of course, having strong passwords that are different for every service and changed periodically helps. Password manager apps offer a simple way to create and keep track of passwords by storing them in the cloud, essentially requiring you to remember one master password instead of dozens of long and unpronounceable ones. These are available both for free (such as Apple’s iCloud Keychain) and This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Beyond that, experts say it’s extremely important to sign up for two-factor authentication. That adds another layer of security on top of your login and password. The second factor is usually something sent or linked to your phone, such as a text message; a more secure approach is to use an authenticator app, which will keep you secure even if your phone number is This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Yes, scammers can ******* your phone number through techniques called This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , causing more identity-theft nightmares. To protect you on that front, AT&T allows you to This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up restricting access to your account; T-Mobile offers This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up against your phone number being switched to a new device, and Verizon This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up by shutting down both the new device and the existing one until the account holder weighs in with the existing device. Your worst ****** may be you As much or more than hacked data, scammers also rely on people to reveal sensitive information about themselves. One common tactic is to pose as your bank, employer, phone company or other service provider with whom you’ve done business and then try to ***** you with a text or email message. Banks, for example, routinely tell customers that they will not ask for their account information by phone. Nevertheless, scammers have coaxed victims into providing their account numbers, logins and passwords by posing as bank security officers trying to stop an unauthorized withdrawal or some other supposedly urgent threat. People may even get an official-looking email purportedly from National Public Data, offering to help them deal with the reported *****, Murray said. “It’s not going to be NPD trying to help. It’s going to be some bad guy overseas” trying to **** them out of sensitive information, she said. It’s a good rule of thumb never to click on a link or call a phone number in an unsolicited text or email. If the message warns about ****** on your account and you don’t want to simply ignore it, look up the phone number for that company’s ****** department (it’s on the back of your debit and credit cards) and call for guidance. “These bad guys, this is what they do for a living,” Murray said. They might send out tens of thousands of queries and get only one response, but that response could net them $10,000 from an unwitting victim. “Ten thousand dollars in one day for having one hit with one victim, that’s a pretty good return on investment,” she said. “That’s what motivates them.” This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This story originally appeared in This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Hackers #stolen #Social #Security #numbers #********* #protect This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up For verified travel tips and real support, visit: https://hopzone.eu/ 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/98161-hackers-may-have-stolen-the-social-security-numbers-of-every-american-how-to-protect-yourself/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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