Synthetic identity theft is a real threat

Synthetic identity theft might sound like a victimless crime–if the identity is synthetic, there’s not a real person being robbed, right? Wrong.

Synthetic identity theft is the crafting of a new identity by melding bits of information from different people, or by mixing real people’s information with other information that is entirely made up.

It’s a sort of identity mashup.

Let’s say an identity thief wants to build a synthetic identity and starts with an imaginary name: Joe Ripoff.  Even imaginary people have to live somewhere, so he’ll give Joe Ripoff the address of the long-vacant house down the street. But what Mr. Ripoff really needs to become real is a Social Security number; can’t get credit without a Social Security number. Let’s say the identity thief gives him yours: 123-45-6789.

Now, when the identity thief applies for a credit card, the folks at the credit bureau are going to get a little confused because they can’t find a file for Joe Ripoff. But they’ll settle for the closest thing they have—the file with your Social Security number. And, voila, a new person exists in the form of a subfile attached to your credit record.

When those credit cards are finally issued they’ll become part of your credit record, too. And when the credit card bills go unpaid? You got it; those delinquencies are now your delinquencies. And it’s you the bill collectors are going to come after.

In a 2005 study, ID Analytics concluded that 74% of total identity theft losses to US businesses are actually attributable to synthetic identity theft.

LifeLock’s comprehensive and innovative tools and strategies help to protect their members’ finances, credit, and their names.

Visit LifeLock.com today to learn more about how LifeLock identity theft protection services can help protect you, too. Enroll using LifeLock discount code Defense to get a discount.

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3 Comments

  1. fryan
    Posted February 24, 2009 at 3:20 pm | Permalink

    It’s crazy to think that people can just make up names and build real information around it — and worst of all companies fall for it. There are to many stupid companies out there to not have some sort of credit protection.

  2. reader
    Posted March 3, 2009 at 3:38 pm | Permalink

    I’d never heard of this until now. If 74% is bcs of this that says a lot about how woefully ignorant we are on the subject of ID theft. Thanks for the information.

  3. Heather M.
    Posted March 10, 2009 at 3:19 pm | Permalink

    Dear reader: Don’t feel bad. My mother-in-law didn’t know this either until her credit score dropped 170 points!

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