Identity Theft Insurance

Written by Carlton on July 28, 2008 – 7:21 pm

CETA, the 4,000 strong network of insurance intermediaries, is urging its brokers to promote identity theft insurance.

The risk of this type of fraud is increasing for UK consumers; losses from plastic cards used for Internet, telephone and mail purchases totalled £290.5 million in 2007, although CETA believes the figure could be much higher.

While the crime is mainly associated with credit card fraud, identities are also being stolen to open bank accounts, divert mail and apply for social benefits and mortgages.

According to the network’s managing director, David Quick, identity theft insurance is relatively cheap and can provide invaluable practical assistance to victims.

Mr Quick is concerned that many organisations do not appear to look after customers’ records well and that as criminals become more resourceful, consumers are beginning to live in fear of identity fraud.

The Financial Services Authority has recently completed a survey of the data security systems of 39 firms in the financial services sector and has gone on to warn that businesses must do more to protect customers’ personal data.

Posted under Credit & Debit Card Fraud, Identity Crime, Internet Crime, Passport Fraud, Person-Identifying Information, Tackling ID Theft | No Comments »

Person-Identifying Information on Your ID Card

Written by Bill on July 23, 2008 – 10:15 pm

The information accessible through your ID card with cover both your ‘biographical footprint’ and biometric data.

Your biographical footprint includes simple facts of your life, like your name, date of birth and living address.

When anyone applies for their ID card, the authorities will not rely solely on what is put on the application forms but will also check the names, addresses and so on against the same data that may be stored along with your National Insurance and driving license details. This is so as to avoid the possibility of forged documents to attain ID cards for people who do not really exist and to prevent criminals claiming ID cards under other people’s names

Once an identity has been checked thoroughly, biometric data will also be recorded for the applicant.  Biometrics are unique personal characteristics that are impossible to be faked except through some of the most sophisticated and expensive techniques, and even then they are not foolproof. Iris scans are currently impossible to fake.

Recording facial and iris biometrics is like having a high-quality digital photo taken.  Recording fingerprints involves just pressing them against a sophisticated reader with no ink involved at all.  Biometric indentifying technology is already being in the facial recognition aspects of the new biometric passports.

Biometric details will be permanently paired and sealed along with biographical information to create completely unique and secure identity data. So that all this can be done, applicants for ID cards will be asked to visit in person a local or mobile application centre wherever possible in an effort to make it even harder for criminals to impersonate someone else when applying for an ID card.

Posted under Identity Cards, Identity Crime, Identity Verification Service, National Identity Register, Passport Fraud, Person-Identifying Information, Tackling ID Theft | No Comments »

The National Identity Register

Written by Gene on July 11, 2008 – 9:35 am

The utility of the British ID card programme is predicated wholly upon the success and efficiency of brand spanking new the National Identity Register (NIR) – started just this year (2008).

The system has been described by Government as being easy-to-use and extremely secure, containing personal identification for adults living in the UK – adults, in this case, being anyone over the age of 16 years.

The NIR scheme will be run by the Identity and Passport Service (IPS). The Government predicts that it will take several years yet for the NIR to become fully operational with everyone registered on and with it. Although this year saw the first enrolments of foreign nationals into the scheme, ID cards for British citizens are not expected to be available for issue in the UK before 2009.

The initial stages of the ID card programme will see them being issued to British citizens who apply for passports, either for a first time or to renew and old one, although they will eventually be available to people who do not want passports as well.

 For those who are resident within the UK but who are not British citizens, all residency permits, registration certificates or residency cards will take the form of an ID card instead.

The NIR scheme will eventually become compulsory, although the exact timescale of this has not been ironed out yet. Once it does become compulsory, all British citizens over the age of 16 will be required to have an ID card by law, although we are told that it will not be compulsory to carry it around with us at all times.

Posted under Credit & Debit Card Fraud, Identity Cards, Identity Crime, Internet Crime, Passport Fraud, Person-Identifying Information, Tackling ID Theft | 1 Comment »

Joined Up Defence Against ID Fraud

Written by Gene on June 30, 2008 – 11:13 pm

In December 2005 representatives from a range of government departments and all the police forces in England and Wales were brought together into a network of Single Points of Contact (SPOC) for detecting and prosecuting identity related crimes in the UK.

Each of these individual ‘SPOCs’ act a focal points within the organisations they work within for issues dealing with identity fraud. So, as an example, at any point a police force could contact a SPOC at the Immigration Office or even the Security Service (MI5) to request information regarding an issue relating to a specific instance of ID.

The role of ‘SPOCs’ is also to monitor particular cases of ID crime from start to finish and to volunteer any information to other agencies that they may think relevant to any particular investigation, even if they have not been asked for that information.

Indeed the Home Office, the Identity and Passport Service and the DVLA have worked with APACS, FLA and CIFAS to produce ‘Identity Fraud - The UK Manual’, which is designed to improve the awareness and training of people within financial institutions in order to combat ID fraud at the ‘cutting edge’ (so the checking and verifying potential customers’ PII)

All of the above, when put together, means that steps have been taken to link up thinking and better co-ordinate authorities on the matter of ID crime as well create joined up, and therefore more effective, counter measures to combat it.

Posted under Credit & Debit Card Fraud, Identity Crime, Passport Fraud, Person-Identifying Information, Tackling ID Theft | No Comments »

Combating Passport Fraud

Written by Carlton on June 30, 2008 – 7:49 pm

In order to prevent ID fraud across borders – a kind of ID fraud that is often associated with some of the worst crimes we have laws against, such as abduction, people smuggling and forced prostitution, the drugs trade and terrorism to name but a few – the UK’s Identity and Passport Service (IPS) has created and deployed a special database of all known lost and stolen passports, which is open to use by Interpol and other cross-border authorities in order to combat these sorts of crimes.

A passport validation service has become available to the public at large that allows employers, banks and other private and public institutions that are given passports as ID to check the passport they are given against a database of known stolen and lost passports. This can cut down on fake bank accounts (as one example) and is a great tool in the battle against this sort of fraud.

Likewise, all adults who wish to get a passport for the first time must now submit to an interview, cutting down on the possibility of misrepresentation to gain a passport. This will help prevent people from pretending to be someone else while applying for passports, because whereas fake-passports are detectable, a genuine passport for an identity that does not really exist or with a name and other PII for someone else is harder to detect during the immigration procedures and customs.

Posted under Identity Crime, Passport Fraud, Person-Identifying Information, Tackling ID Theft | No Comments »

Identity Crime Legislation

Written by Bill on June 30, 2008 – 6:36 pm

On June the 7th 2006 the British Government’s Identity Cards Act came into force. This Act essentially detailed various crimes pertaining to possessing and/or creating and/or intending to use documents for false identities for criminal purposes and of using someone else’s identity, or rather the genuine documentation pertaining to their identity (like their passports for instance) for the same purposes.

These offences detailed in the Act apply to all documents that can be used as Person-Identifying Information (PII) – so passports, immigration documents, birth certificates, national insurance cards, driving licenses and indeed the identity cards that will eventually be issued under the National Identity Scheme.

The Fraud Act was also passed in 2006, coming into force on January 15th of that year, stipulating three ‘new’ ways in which fraud can be enacted:

- false representation, which includes dishonestly causing loss or the risk of loss to another with intent of gaining yourself
- failing to disclose information
- abuse of position
- obtaining services dishonestly
- possessing equipment to commit frauds
- supplying articles for use in frauds

Alongside the Criminal Justice Act of 2003 that altered law so that the same penalties for stealing and fraudulently using a driving license are comparable for doing the same with another person’s passport (making them both offences criminal offences that one can be arrested and imprisoned for), these are responses to the increased ease and likelihood of fraud crimes due to the IT based social systems we have in place, that make access to our PII all the more easy.

Posted under Identity Crime, Passport Fraud, Person-Identifying Information, Tackling ID Theft | No Comments »