The Qld Police Services’ Take on Identity Theft

The Queensland Ploice Service have produced a series of videos

Fiscal, The Fraud Fighting Ferret is on the case and helping to protect unsuspecting individuals from becoming victims of Identy Fraud

This is an animated take on a very serious issue..


Going Out To Dinner can REALLY Cost You…
CBS News Report that Credit Card Skimming is yet another threat when going out to dinner

Would you give your credit card to a complete stranger in the street?
No… and yet we do it all the time at a resturant and they walk away and have plenty of time to ‘SKIM’ your credit card while you’re waiting for them to bring your card back.

Watch this short video to learn a few things to be careful of..


Identity Theft, What are the risks
$3 Billion And Rising !
That’s the cost of Identity Theft In Australia Last Year Alone..
Has it hit you?

On Monday the 12th of October 2009, Channel 7 News reported that more than $3,000,000,000 (Three Billion Dollars) was the loss due to Identity theft in Australia last year.

That is almost $14 lost for every man woman and child in Australia today.

All Australians should watch this compelling 1:33 minute video

By Graham Doessel


Facebook is ‘gold’ for identity thievesTONY BARTLETT
October 12, 2009 – 4:09PM
AAP

Social networking sites such as Facebook are “gold” for identity thieves, an international forum has been told.

International experts on identity crime are in the Gold Coast for a symposium to discuss the latest innovations in combating the growing global problem of identity theft.

Identity theft costs Australia around $3 billion a year.

Detective Superintendent Brian Hay, from Queensland’s Fraud and Corporate Crime Group, says fraud is the most under-reported crime type, largely because victims often feel so embarrassed.

Supt Hay said one of the richest fields for global identity harvesters are social networking sites like Facebook.

“Anyone who joins a social networking site can have a look at random almost, and pick up people’s dates of birth, where they work and family details,” he said.

“That’s gold to people who want to steal identities.”

He said computer hackers were writing programs to reap identity information on social networking sites.

“We know the crooks are harvesting identity data and building empires of massive identity warehousing stocks,” he said.

“We know they’re writing data-mining programs to extract information from various sources, pull it together and build profiles on people.

“Today it may be Facebook but what’s tomorrow?

“We’ve got Twitter, it’s live by the second. It’s an issue we need to address.”

The conference, which will hear from experts from Romania, the Netherlands and the United States, ends on Wednesday.