up the assets of failed e-commerce companies. Why would they? To get their databases, rich with personal information on customers, including credit card numbers. I bet it's already happened. When it was functioning, the retailer Toysmart.com assured its customers that their personal information would never be shared with anyone. When it went bankrupt in May 2000, that promise went out the window. It took out ads offering to sell its database. Fortunately, a subsidiary of Walt Disney agreed to pay it fifty-thousand dollars to destroy the information before it got into the wrong hands.
NUMBERS FOR SALE
The Internet has become the equivalent of an electronic shopping mall for identity thieves. Endless websites have sprung up that sell personal information. One site, docusearch.com, will retrieve a person's Social Security number for a mere forty-nine dollars. How long will it take? One day.
It's all perfectly legal. They buy this information from the nineteen states that use the Social Security number for the driver's license number. They'll go to a driver's license bureau and ask, how many Social Security numbers do you have? They're told, 1.3 million. Okay, can we buy them for $8 a number? They'll approach one of the major health insurers, with millions of numbers, and again buy them for $8 apiece. They buy numbers from collection agencies and credit bureaus, and they resell the information for $49 a number. The only thing you have to type in is the person's name and the last-known state you believe he or she lived in, and within seconds, up comes the Social Security number. I've gone online a number of times to test it out and they've never not had the number. Try it yourself.
Another website, netdetective2000, brags that it will find out "everything you ever wanted to know about your friends, family, neighbors, employees, and even your boss!" All you do is take your mouse and click on the information you want. It's a complete dossier: the person's name, date of birth, Social Security number, address, bank, bank account number, what stocks he owns, who his stock broker is, where he works, what he does at his job, what he makes, if he has children, his children's names, their ages, and their Social Security numbers.
If you're wondering who's telling them all this information, you are. When you bought a camera, there was a warranty card, and attached to that warranty card was a consumer questionnaire. Are you married, divorced, single, separated? Are you a doctor, a lawyer, a professional, a technician, or other? Do you earn between $20,000 and $50,000, $50,000 and $100,000? Do you bank at a bank, credit union, savings bank, or mutual fund house? You went right down the list answering all their questions and all of that information went into a data base. Then they turned around and sold it, and the next thing you know, it was being used against you.
There's another website that advertises on TV called 1-800 - SEARCH. They say they can find out if someone has a criminal record. Then, in a lower tone of voice, they say, "or fifty other things." And the fifty other things are just about anything you would want to know about someone. It's unbelievable what they know about people - practically everything down to their favorite doughnut and how they did in third-grade social studies - and I'm talking about ordinary people who think they live a private life.
Everything is for sale. A Social Security number is $49. A birth certificate is $79. A driver's license is $90. Or if you want an entire package of documents just for the purpose of assuming someone's identity, it goes for $2,000.
I went to the doctor the other day. It wasn't my regular doctor, but an oral surgeon I hadn't seen before. The receptionist had me fill out a new patient questionnaire, then she needed my Blue Cross card, which contains my Social Security number, and my driver's license. She made copies of both, and all this was deposited in the doctor's file. That receptionist, or the next receptionist, could easily sell that information.
In a number of instances, low-paid hospital orderlies have stolen and sold patient information. Medical records are especially attractive to identity thieves, as they contain your Social Security number, date of birth, and even a physical description. Some criminals, to help their fraud, have actually undergone plastic surgery to look more like their victim. Imagine that - someone who not only says he's you but looks like