What a Great GiftComedian David Brenner came from a poor but close family. When he graduated from his school, however, he was given an unforgettable(34) gift. "Some of my friends got new clothes and about a(35) few rich kids even got new cars," he remembered, "When my father(36) reached out into his pants pocket and took something out. I extended(37) my hand, palm up, and he let my present drop into it—a nickel!"(38) "Dad said to me, ’Buy a newspaper with that. Read every word of(39) it. Then turn to the classified section and get yourself to a job. Get(40) into the world. It’s all yours now. ’" "I always thought that as was(41) a great joke my father had played on me until a few years later when(42) I was in the Army, upon sitting in a foxhole, and thinking about(43) my family and my life. It was then when I realized that my friends(44) had been gotten only new cars, or only clothes. My father had given(45) me the whole world. What a great gift is !\ 35()
The Crisis of CreditHere’s the scary thing about the identity-theft ring that the feds cracked last week: there was nothing any of its estimated 40, 000 victims could have done to prevent it from happening. This was an inside job, according to court documents. A lowly help-desk worker at Teledata Communications, a software firm that helps banks access credit reports online, allegedly stole passwords for those reports and sold them to a group of 20 thieves at $ 60 a pop. (8) Cost to the victims: $ 3 million and rising. Even scarier is that this, the largest identity-theft bust to date, is just a drop in the bit bucket. More than 700,000 Americans have their credit hijacked every year. It’s one of crime’s biggest growth markets. A name, address and Social Security number — which can often be found on the Web — are all anybody needs to apply for a bogus line of credit. Credit companies make $ 1.3 trillion annually and lose less than 2% of that revenue to fraud. (9) As it stands now, it’s up to you to protect your identity.The good news is that there are plenty of steps you can take. Most credit thieves are opportunists, not well-organized gangs. (10) Others steal wallets and return them, taking only a Social Security number. Shredding your junk mail and leaving your Social Security card at home can save a lot of agony later.But the most effective way to keep your identity clean is to check your credit reports once or twice a year. There are three major credit-report outfits: Equifax (equifax.com), Trans-Union (www.transunion.com) and Experian (experian.com). (11) Of the three, I found Trans Union’s website to be the cheapest and most comprehensive- laying out state-by-state prices, rights and tips for consumers in easy-to-read fashion.If you’re lucky enough to live in Colorado, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey or Vermont, you are entitled to one free report a year by law. (12) Avoid services that offer to monitor your reports year-round for about $ 70; that’s $10 more than the going rate among thieves. If you think you’re a victim of identity theft, you can ask for fraud alerts to be put on file at each of the three credit-report companies. You can also download a theft-report form at: www. consumer. gov/idtheft, which, along with a local police report, should help when irate creditors come knocking. Just don’t expect justice. That audacious help-desk worker was one of the fewer than 2% of identity thieves who are ever caught. 12()
A lot of them go Dumpster diving for those millions of "pre-approved" credit-card mailings that go out every day.
B. It used to get quite interesting around the dinner table.
C. That allowed the gang to cherry-pick consumers with good credit and applies for all kinds of accounts in their names.
D. So there’s little financial incentive for them to make the application process more secure.
E. All allow you to order reports online, which is a lot better than wading through voicemail hell on their 800 lines.
F. Otherwise it’s going to cost $8 to $14 each time.
G. This was an inside job, according to court documents.