Use this FREE information to
protect your personal finances, children and health privacy against theft!
- Privacy is an Important Principle
- Protection Against Identity Theft
- What to do if you've been a victim of
identity theft
- Tips for Protecting Your Privacy
- Children's Privacy
- How Financial Service Companies Share
Your Personal Information
- Protecting Your Health Privacy
Up Privacy is an
Important Principle
As a consumer, you benefit when information about
you is used to approve your credit application. On the other hand, you may not
want to receive unsolicited telemarketing calls or mail. And you could be
treated unfairly, or even become a victim of crime, if your personal
information is inaccurate or misused.
You have privacy rights for certain personal
records such as your credit reports, but many situations aren't covered by law.
To address privacy concerns, some companies and industry groups have adopted
voluntary policies. Look for those policies on sales literature, web sites, or
forms companies ask you to fill out.
If you don't see anything about how your personal
information will be handled, ask. By doing business with companies whose
privacy practices meet your approval, you can protect yourself from abuse and
use your purchasing power to help promote good privacy policies.
In addition to various federal privacy laws, many
states have their own privacy laws concerning:
- Telemarketing;
- Employment;
- Use of social security numbers;
- Credit card or checking account numbers;
- Medical records;
- Mailing lists;
- Credit reports;
- Debt collection;
- Computerized communications;
- Insurance records; and
- Public data banks.
Check with your state or local consumer agency to
find out where to get information about specific privacy rights.
Up Protection Against Identity Theft
Be especially careful with sensitive personal
information. Your social security number should not be requested except by an
employer, government agency, lender or credit bureau.
If that information falls into the wrong hands, it
can be used by someone to impersonate you in order to steal from your accounts
or to steal from others in your name.
Many states no longer use social security numbers
on drivers' licenses. Some states offer random numbers as alternatives, and bar
merchants from asking consumers to put their social security numbers on checks
or credit card slips.
Check your credit report regularly. Once a year
should be enough, but you may want to check it more frequently if you believe
that someone else has impersonated you in order to get credit or other benefits
in your name.
Congress asked the Federal Trade Commission to
provide information to consumers about identity theft and to take complaints
from those whose identities have been stolen.
Up :What to
do if you've been a victim of identity theft
Call the FTC's Identity Theft Hotline toll-free
at 1-877-IDTHEFT (438-4338), or
File a complaint on-line at
www.consumer.gov/idtheft.
The FTC puts your information into a secure
consumer fraud database and may, in appropriate instances, share it with other
law enforcement agencies and private entities, including any companies about
which you may complain.
Up Tips for
Protecting Your Privacy
Don't provide information that isn't required. For
instance, most information requested on a warranty registration form isn't
necessary for the warranty. But you may want to give your phone number so you
can be contacted easily about product recalls.
Ask what information about you may be tracked and
how it is used. Supermarket scan cards enable you to get special sale prices,
but your purchasing history could also be sold to other companies.
Guard your financial account numbers. Only provide
your credit card, charge card, debit card, calling card or bank account number
if you're using that account to pay for a purchase or you're applying for
credit. It isn't necessary to give that type of information for any other
reason.
Screen your calls. You can use an answering
machine to listen to a caller and decide whether you want to pick up. There are
also optional telephone services that you can buy to accept calls only from
certain numbers, or to see the name and number of the person calling you
(Caller ID). Check with your local telephone company.
Keep your phone number private. You can buy a
service to block others from using Caller ID to see your name and the number
you're calling from. But be aware that this blocking may not work with every
type of number you call. Ask your local phone company exactly how the service
works. You can also get an unlisted or unpublished phone number for a fee.
Up Children's
Privacy
Commercial web sites must now obtain parental
consent before collecting, using, or disclosing personal information from
children under 13. These are new rules that are part of the 1998 Children's
Online Privacy Protection Act. For more information, contact the FTC or click
on Kids Privacy at www.ftc.gov
Talk about privacy concerns with your children and
other household members. Everyone should understand what information you feel
is and is not appropriate to provide on the phone, while using a computer, and
in other situations.
Up How
Financial Service Companies Share Your Personal Information
Under Federal law banks, insurance companies and
stockbrokers may now combine businesses. This means they can share your
information with each other. They are also allowed to share your information
with third parties that provide marketing services for them or for joint
ventures with other financial institutions.
You can:
"Opt out," or ask that your personal information
not be shared with unaffiliated third parties. Even if you don't opt out, the
actual account numbers for bank or credit card accounts may not be shared with
unaffiliated third parties for marketing.
Don't allow your credit record to be checked
except for legitimate reasons. A lender or employer can check your credit
record. But, it's illegal for a business to check your record unless you're
seeking financing. Too many inquiries can hurt your credit rating by making it
appear that you are seeking too much credit.
Never give anyone your online password. Con
artists may try to trick you into providing your password by pretending to be
your online service provider in order to use your access, at your expense.
Your service provider already has your password, and no one else should
need it.
Be aware of "cookies" on the Internet. A web
site can transfer a file, called a cookie, to the hard drive of your computer
when you visit in order to track your activities on its site. This information
is used for customer service or marketing, but you can usually specify you
don't want to create a cookie.
Make sure it's safe before you provide financial
information on-line. Your computer and/or browser should alert you if you are
using a non-secure site.
Up Protecting Your Health Privacy
With health care information being stored and
shared on computers, it is a good idea to be aware of who has your health
information and how it is being used.
The Medical Information Bureau is a data bank used
by insurance companies. Get a copy of your file to make sure the information it
contains is correct by writing to the MIB, PO Box 105, Essex Station, Boston,
MA 02112.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
expects to take action to improve health privacy protections for consumers. For
the latest information go to www.hhs.gov or:
Contact the Health Privacy Project, Institute for
Health Care Research and Policy, Georgetown University Medical Center, 2233
Wisconsin Avenue, NW, Suite 525, Washington, DC 20007, 202-687-0880
http://www.healthprivacy.org/.
If you've fallen behind on your
bills, especially credit cards, don't panic. You may have several good options
available to you. Your success starts by assessing your current situation and
finding a trusted service provider that is licensed in your state.
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Prattville, Alabama Privacy Policy |
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