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Social Security number use restrictions wanted

Consumers Union poll finds that Americans want stricter rules on what companies can do with their Social Security numbers.
By Brad Reed , Network World , 09/06/2007
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A poll released today by the Consumers Union released suggests that a large majority of Americans support government action that would restrict the use of Social Security numbers to help prevent identity theft.

The poll, which was conducted through a telephone survey of more than 1,000 American adults, found that 89% of consumers thought that the government should pass laws that restrict the use of Social Security numbers by outside parties, and that 97% of consumers said they should have the right to freeze access to their credit files if their Social Security number is stolen.

“The widespread use of Social Security numbers has made it easier for crooks to commit fraud,” said Jeannine Kenny, the senior policy analyst at the Consumers Union, a non-profit consumer advocacy group. “It’s time to restrict the availability of Social Security numbers to prevent this sensitive information from falling into the hands of identity thieves.”

Currently, the Consumers Union is advocating national legislation that would restrict companies’ ability to share or sell Social Security numbers, and would guarantee that consumers had a low-cost option for freezing access to their credit information.

“We need to reduce the number of Social Security numbers in the marketplace, and we can do that by restricting their sale and purchase,” Kenny says.

The survey found that 87% of respondents had been asked in the past year to produce their Social Security number in whole or in part by the government or by a business. Some 78% of consumers surveyed said that they were reluctant to provide their Social Security number to businesses or the government, but were also concerned about being denied services for refusing to do so. Only 28% of respondents who were asked to provide their Social Security number refused to give it, the survey found.

In 2006, the Federal Trade Commission received roughly 241,000 ID fraud complaints, and has received over a million ID fraud complaints since 2002. A 2003 survey published by the FTC, however, suggests that incidence of ID fraud is much more widespread than the total number of complaints the FTC receives each year, as 12.7% of respondents reported being victims of some sort of identity fraud within the past five years.

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RE: Social Security number use restrictions wantedBy O on September 7, 2007, 4:18 pmThe Fed GOV should have never allowed SS#'s to be used for commercial purposes in the first place ... they certainly were not considering the person to whom the...

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Use of SS numbersBy Anonymous on September 9, 2007, 12:08 pmGod save us from ourselves. When they were first issued, the Social Security number was not meant to be revealed to every Tom Dick or Harry for ID. You were even...

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Clean up government firstBy Anonymous on September 17, 2007, 5:24 pmYup I agree we should protect social security numbers and it should start with the Federal Government. Can't get a elderly person to give you their SSN ??? Have...

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i forget my security numberBy Anonymous on November 13, 2008, 8:07 pmhow to find my security number again if i am now in indonesia

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