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ID Theft: Should you believe the hype?

Joris Evers CNET News.com

Published: 25 Oct 2005 16:10 BST

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Gretchen Hayes was understandably concerned when she received a letter warning that she could be at risk of identity theft.

A laptop had been stolen from the University of California at Berkeley in March, and stored on it was personal information on 98,369 graduate students or graduate-school applicants, including Hayes.

The breach — which exposed names, dates of birth, addresses and Social Security numbers — was widely reported in the media, and the school created a special Web site to help individuals who found themselves suddenly vulnerable.

In the months since, however, not a single case of stolen identity related to the incident has been reported. The laptop was recovered in September, and police believe that the thief was interested only in the computer, not in the information in its files.

"I have not seen any ramifications," Hayes said.

It is always possible that a crime may yet occur or has simply gone unnoticed. But the Berkeley incident underscores the reality of ID theft, which is often portrayed as a scourge in our increasingly digital society. Though headlines create the perception of rampant hackings or corporate blunders, few people whose personal information is exposed are ever victimised.

Widespread media reports have given rise to much misinformation and confusion around the issue. Many people believe that shopping or banking online increases the risk, for example, though the chances of fraud are far greater in the bricks-and-mortar world.

Online and off
Just 12 percent of identity fraud cases last year occurred because the victim was active online, while 63 percent happened as the target used traditional channels, according to a survey by Javelin Strategy & Research, which tracks such data. The information is based on a survey in which 54.1 percent of ID theft victims were able to identify how fraudsters obtained their personal information.

"The most extreme forms of identity fraud are pretty rare," said James Van Dyke, an analyst at Javelin. He identified true ID fraud as those cases in which an individual used another person's name to take out a loan, apply for a credit line or even post bail after an arrest.

Moreover, in those cases when online consumers do fall victim to fraud, they find out faster and suffer much lower financial losses than...

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