Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Secret consumer scores threaten privacy and increase risks for ID theft victims

By Mark Pribish
Vice President and ID Theft Practice Leader

When it comes to ID Theft and data breach, most people only think about financial ID theft and their credit scores.

According to a new report released last month by the World Privacy Forum (WPF) - a public-interest research group with a focus on privacy and the data broker industry - consumers may want to learn more about their "secret consumer scores."

Consumer scoring, while not new, has increased in size and scope due to big data and technology. At the same time, consumer scoring is "largely unregulated either by the Fair Credit Reporting Act or the Equal Credit Opportunity Act where thousands of pieces of information about consumers' pasts predict how they will behave in the future."

The WPF report continues by stating "the scores are typically secret in some way. The existence of the score itself, its uses, the underlying factors, data sources, or even the score range may be hidden. Consumer scores with secret factors, secret sources, and secret algorithms can be obnoxious, unaccountable, untrustworthy, and unauditable. Secret scores can be wrong, but no one may be able to find out that they are wrong or what the truth is."

This is important to know because "victims of identity theft may be at particular risk for harm because of inaccurate consumer scores," according to the report.

In fairness to financial institutions, retailers and other users of consumer scoring - some of these consumer reports provide benefits that can help individual consumers.

For example, the idea of individual consumer modeling, in which retailers and creditors try to identify and separate profitable customers from unprofitable customers - along with predicting purchasing patterns and customer loyalty - can help consumers save money through discounted pricing and targeted sales.

Another example is the transaction score which is used to identify fraudulent credit/debit card use based on your regular credit/debit card buying habits, including the average dollar amount of each transaction, type of transaction and transaction location. If your transaction amount, type and/or location creates a red flag like using your debit card in China, your debit card company might decline future activity until they have spoken directly with you to confirm your travel to China or your debit card is being fraudulently used.

To conclude, here are some additional examples of consumer scores:

  • Attrition risk score is a retention tool to help retain existing customers
  • Bankruptcy score that measures the likelihood of your declaring bankruptcy
  • Behavior score where good or bad behavior motivates the retailer or creditor to a specific action
  • Churn score where many companies, such as wireless carriers and cable companies, create scores that predict how likely you are to take your business to a competitor
  • Collection score determines which delinquent customer will pay off their past due amount
  • Consumer profitability score predicts how quickly you will pay your debts
  • Job security score where employment and unemployment data, economic trends and forecasts predict the probability that you will lose your job
  • Medication adherence score predicts your likelihood of following a prescription plan and your doctor's orders
  • Response model score can help a retailer anticipate purchasing patterns, enhance the customer experience, and cross-sell new products/services
  • Revenue Score can predict how much revenue and profit will be generated through each customer

Not all consumer scores are bad. Consumer scoring offers benefits to both users and consumers. But regulators like the FTC need to make consumer scores public and transparent to the consumer.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

ID Theft is the Number 1 Consumer Complaint for the 14th consecutive Year

In February of each year, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) releases an annual report on identity theft and fraud complaints called the Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book.

The 2014 report, reflecting 2013 statistics, reported Identity Theft was the top consumer complaint for the 14th consecutive year.

Specifically, government documents / benefits fraud (34%) was the most common form of reported identity theft, followed by credit card fraud (17%), phone or utilities fraud (14%), and bank fraud

Other significant categories of identity theft reported by victims were employment-related fraud (6%) and loan fraud (4%).

One of the more interesting findings is that the mature market (50 years and older) now represents 37 percent of all ID Theft victims, thus making it the single largest demographic of victims.

2013 ID Theft Complaints

The FTC report also included the following highlights:

  • While 37 percent of individuals at 50 years of age and older are victims of ID Theft, 47 percent of individuals 50 years of age and older are victims of fraud
  • 30 percent of the identity theft complaints are related to tax or wage-related fraud
  • The top 5 states for ID theft in order were Florida, Georgia, California, Michigan, and Nevada
  • Children 19 and younger represent 6 percent of all victims
  • Victims spend numerous hours straightening out their lives following an incident of identity theft
  • Online identity theft is popular, with a target demographic of individuals between 20-29 years of age, who are posting information online
  • Data breaches at organizations are happening more frequently
  • Phishing emails are at an all-time high
  • For military consumers, Identity Theft was the number one complaint category

In addition, Javelin Strategy & Research released its 2014 Identity Fraud Report in February and reported that 13.1 million Americans were victims of ID theft in 2013.

While ID Theft has been in the news over the last decade, the total number of 13.1 million ID Theft victims last year was the second-highest total since the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) began counting victims in 2003.

Finally, the FTC advises anyone who spots a scam, is the victim of identity theft or other fraud-related issues, to file a complaint online with the agency's Complaint Assistant or call 1-877-FTC-HELP (877-382-4357).

For more information about identity theft, you can go to the following links:

Identity Theft Resource Center
http://www.idtheftcenter.org/artman2/publish/c_guide/Solution_16.shtml

Privacy Rights Clearinghouse
https://www.privacyrights.org/

FTC ID Theft Consumer Page
http://www.consumer.ftc.gov/features/feature-0014-identity-theft