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Hail to the Thief: Clinton Speech B-Roll Opens Door to ID Theft

Posted: 09/08/2012 11:40 am

Was it excessive exuberance? Was it judgmental deficiency? Was it the thrill of hearing a barnburner by the President of the World? Well, whatever it was, it was a dangerous mistake.

Wednesday night at the Democratic National Convention, during a particularly rousing segment of President Clinton's forceful and unabashed dissection of the Republican depiction of Obamacare as a destroyer of Medicare, an enthusiastic Democratic Delegate waved her Medicare card in front of a national news pool camera. The problem is that anyone sharing the moment either online or on television, or researching a replay of that moment, had or will have the opportunity take a long, slow look at a cornucopia of her personal identifying information and be in a position to use it for nefarious purposes.

At the very least, the video offers would-be thieves the opportunity to retrieve her name and her Medicare identification, which also happens to be her Social Security Number. While that may well be enough to begin the identity theft process, they need only go to a variety of other sources to acquire additional personal information to have a more complete picture of the victim.

I can totally understand the emotion of the moment, but that minor burst of unmitigated joy carries with it the possibility of weeks, months, if not years of personal pain and life disruption. But there's a problem that lies deeper than just this moment of bad judgment; in fact, this brief flash of television footage underscores a huge problem for all card-carrying Medicare recipients -- that they are essentially sitting targets for identity theft, whether they wave their card in front of the world, or if the card otherwise leaves their possession. Consumer advocates have railed for years against the dangers of using SSNs as an identifier for other purposes, and of the display of SSNs on any card that you must carry with you -- simply because it greatly amplifies consumers' risk for identity theft. The Government Accountability Office recently called for the removal of SSNs from Medicare cards, but until that actually happens, Medicare recipients will be left to fend for themselves on this one.

With all of the information floating around the brick and mortar, as well as the cyber world about us, combined with the hundreds of millions of files that have been improperly accessed since 2005 due to a pandemic of data breaches, there is little doubt that each of us will suffer some form (if not multiple forms) of identity theft during our lifetime.

Therefore, we need to create a paradigm shift in the way we see the crime and our continuing exposure to it. There are three distinct phases:

1. Limit your risk of exposure: That means don't carry either your -- or your child's -- Social Security card in your wallet. Limit the number of debit and credit cards you leave home with (and always keep a record of the contact information in a safe place). Don't provide personal information to people you don't know by phone, in person or online. Use the most sophisticated security software on your computer, iPad and smart phone, and update it as much as possible. Shred all documents you no longer want or need which contain your sensitive data. Beware of phishing email (spear and well as general). Be careful as to the links you click, or pictures you open, even if you think you know the person. Never send money to people you don't know or money to people you do know, unless they specifically ask you verbally. Do not respond to texts telling you to call numbers that look (and will sound) official because you might be talking to Ivan and not Peggy in customer service or card security. Use strong passwords on all of your apps (alpha numeric not stupid Like your birthdate), and don't share them among sites. Always spell the URL of every site you visit properly.

2. Either enroll in a credit and public records monitoring program, or establish a set of personal protocols that require you to review your credit reports and Social Security Earnings Statements at least annually, your bank and credit card accounts daily and your Explanation of Benefits from your health insurer as appropriate. Also sign up for email and text notification programs with your financial institution, which alerts you to activity in your account -- in many cases in real time.

3. Check with your insurance agent, your account rep at your bank or credit union, your HR department at work, or Student Services at your university to find out if they have a damage control program that can help you navigate the nightmare of an identity theft in the event you become a victim. Several insurance companies offer assistance to their home and auto policyholders; banks and credit unions have them for their depositors and members; Employee Assistance Programs provide help in a bundle of benefits and institutions of higher learning protect their students; faculty or staff as a perk of your relationship with them. Others charge various fees for different levels of service. You can check with the Consumer Federation of America as well as various other organizations to get specifics, as well as reviews of various programs.

Bottom line here -- it doesn't matter how many laws exist, or how vigorously they are enforced -- your identity is your asset. No one has a greater stake in protecting your financial security than you do. And, the ultimate guardian of the consumer is the consumer.

It's good to be enthusiastic about a candidate and a cause. It's bad to wave personal identification cards in front of cameras.

 

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Was it excessive exuberance? Was it judgmental deficiency? Was it the thrill of hearing a barnburner by the President of the World? Well, whatever it was, it was a dangerous mistake. Wednesday nig...
Was it excessive exuberance? Was it judgmental deficiency? Was it the thrill of hearing a barnburner by the President of the World? Well, whatever it was, it was a dangerous mistake. Wednesday nig...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ameriki00
04:57 PM on 09/10/2012
Change the laws so identity theft is treated as a crime against the state and against the financial institution involved rather than as a crime against the individual. Compare the response to a bank robbery to the response to a false credit card charge.
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Footwarrior
Progressive Apparatchik
03:00 PM on 09/10/2012
The problem with Social Security numbers is actually a problem with banking practices. Banks assume that knowing your SS number is proof of identity, when it it nothing of the sort. Make banks responsible for actually confirming the identity of their customers and the problem goes away.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mustlovecats
Corporations are Chinese people.
11:00 PM on 09/09/2012
I tried to get someone to steal my identity. No one wanted to be me.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Skepticat
Supporting skeptical felines everywhere
07:17 AM on 09/10/2012
Rodney Dangerfield would have been proud of you for that line. Fanned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mustlovecats
Corporations are Chinese people.
10:13 AM on 09/10/2012
Thanks! Backatcha Skepticat!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LudeDude714
08:25 PM on 09/09/2012
"Wednesday night at the Democratic National Convention, an enthusiastic Democratic Delegate waved her Medicare card in front of a national news pool camera, a problem that lies deeper than just this moment of bad judgment;" Just being there was a moment of bad judgement for most of them, they looked like lemming following blindly, well except when LA mayor Seragosa tried to count a voice vote and blew it. I watched both the republican and democratic conventions and I think I lost a couple of IQ points doing so, I don't think I will ever do that again, LOL.. Talk about torture, we should take the film to GITMO and use it on terrorists or instead of blaring rock music to drive hostage takers crazy we should blare the conventions, they will come out begging to be arrested.
07:46 PM on 09/09/2012
"And, the ultimate guardian of the consumer is the consumer."

Lies! Under a Progressive government - the self-described political ideology not to be confused with a government that promotes progress - the government will protect you from yourself cradle to grave.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jpsoraire
10:46 AM on 09/09/2012
It isn't Clinton's speech that caused this, it was the news station's employee who tells the other employee which camera to switch to that ends up airing in tv. News Station is at fault and should burden the responsibility for this woman.
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09:32 AM on 09/10/2012
I Don't agree. Although the station's camera operator was being opportunistic, the woman with the card bears all the responsibility if her life gets hacked. Someone could have just as easily snatched that card out of her hand and run off with it into the crowd. She was being careless, nothing else. (And I do hope she doesn't suffer for it.)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alonso Woodbury
Repetition doesn't transform a lie into truth
08:50 AM on 09/09/2012
This is major issue within the healthcare industry and is giving IT and Corporate Compliance departments fits. PHI/PII is information that is worth it's weight in gold to actuaries that make credit decisions, calculate life insurance premiums and possibly in the future, employment. HIPAA compliance requires that any device that touches healthcare information must be encrypted so as to not permit a data breach or harvest of PHI. Data breaches are becoming a monthly occurrence at many healthcare installations.

The information is easily sold because it can be used in many ways which ultimately can be very lucrative in illegal ways, but also by legal entities. The first thought is the illegal use of a lady's SSN on national television. What about the legal misuse of your information to deny you credit, a mortgage, an auto loan or possibly employment based on your health or even worse your inherited genetic propensity to heart trouble, obesity or longevity.

This has the potential to create a caste system where outcastes would live in poverty based on genetics. Scary, scary.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:06 PM on 09/08/2012
Common sense is becoming too rare to be called common sense. That is true also of the camera crew and the producer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jayded
01:03 PM on 09/08/2012
I totally saw that lady and was hoping that someone would tell her later so she could protect herself. I also blame the camera crew because they initially showed her but the card was kind of blurred, but then they went back to her a few moments later and focused on the card where you could clearly read everything.
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kosherkitten
Ailurophile, Feminist, Humanist
06:50 AM on 09/10/2012
Yep, they sure did!
11:56 AM on 09/08/2012
Bookmark this post, I already did. We may need to show it to some folks.