Online identity theft up 200% since 2010
Summary: Following the recent slew of attacks against various websites that resulted in millions of user accounts being compromised, comes this little statistic: fraudsters traded 12 million pieces of personal information online in just Q1 2012.
In Q1 2012, fraudsters traded 12 million pieces of personal information online, or a 200 percent increase over 2010. Most people were unaware their identity had been stolen until they were denied access to something. Identity theft victims commonly experience refusal of loans or credit cards (14 percent), debts being run up in their name (9 percent), refusal of mobile phone contracts (7 percent), and being chased by debt collectors for money they do not owe (7 percent).
The data comes from credit-checking firm Experian, cited by the BBC. The firm blamed the increase of identity theft on the fact that people are signing up for an increasing number of online accounts. On average, most users have 26 online accounts, but use only around five different passwords.
In the last few months, there has been a slew of attacks on websites resulting in user accounts being compromised. Here's a quick list, in no particular order: LinkedIn, eHarmony, Last.fm, Yahoo, Android Forums, Billabong, Formspring, and Nvidia. The total number of users affected is around 10 million, so far.
If you have an account with any of these sites, you should change your password, just to be on the safe side. Furthermore, if you use the same e-mail address and password combination elsewhere, you should change it there as well. In fact, you should make an effort to change your password on a regular basis, and make it more complicated as well.
See also:
- Dropbox hires team of outside experts to investigate spam attack
- Nvidia confirms hackers swiped up to 400,000 user accounts
- Android Forums hacked: 1 million user credentials stolen
- Yahoo fixes flaw behind 450,000 account hack
- Yahoo confirms 400,000 accounts hacked, less than 5% valid
- The top 10 passwords from the Yahoo hack: Is yours one of them?
Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily email newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.