Three Ways to Roll Out the Red Carpet for Identity Thieves
Even with antivirus, spyware software and a good firewall, you can still be easy prey for cyber criminals and hackers. Read on to find out how YOU are giving online criminals easy access to your personal and financial data.
You’ve done all the right things. You’ve installed a good firewall, you keep your antivirus up to date, and you’re making sure you keep up with the latest security patches... so your computer network should be safe from identity thieves, right?
Wrong!
According to a recent study, 37% of electronic identity theft incidents had one aspect in common: they were caused by an action taken by the user. That's correct, more than one-third of identity thefts were not thefts, but information that was readily provided!
So how do you avoid this happening to you and your company?
You can't be 100% safe, but the following three guidelients will prevent you from accidently handing online criminals access to your data
1. Never visit or download free music files, videos or programs from file-sharing sites such as Kazaa. You are not only getting stolen materials- these sites can often introduce worms and viruses to your computer. If you are a business owner, set up web filtering software to prevent employees from downloading any unauthorized programs or files.
2. Never respond to any e-mail from a bank, credit card company, PayPal or online store where items are purchased (such as eBay) asking you to verify your account information, no matter how credible or legitimate it looks. These are phishing scams set up to access your account information.
3. Be sure to ask for ID from anyone requesting physical access to your equipment, and instruct your employees to do so as well. Just to test a theory, I asked a friend to walk into an office, say they are from “the phone company” responding to a problem, and ask to see the network. Access was granted to a complete stranger 100% of the time.
Dealing with and educating your users is typically a responsibility of IT Management department or company. Contact a IT managed services or corporate computer services firm if you have cyber theft concerns for your business.