Social networkers are opening themselves up to identity fraud by posting too
much personal information on their profile pages, according to credit
information provider
Equifax.
As more and more people sign up
to MySpace,
Bebo,
Facebook,
Friends
Reunited and others, increasingly large amounts of personal information is
becoming available to fraudsters and identity thieves.
"Fraudsters are taking advantage of the craze for social networking, and
people do not realise the significance of the information they put out on the
web and who may be accessing it," warned Neil Munroe, external affairs director
at Equifax.
"More and more consumers are signing up to these sites every day and the
chances are they'll put on their date of birth, location, email, job and marital
status.
"We do not want to stop people using these sites, but we do advise them to
limit the information they make available to stop people stealing their
identity."
Mark Sunner, chief security analyst at
MessageLabs,
told
vnunet.com
that a whole new level of social engineering is emerging on the internet.
"Many consumers have only just made their first foray into this new and
exciting web 2.0 development," he said.
"The last thing they will be expecting is that the same water which they
treat as entertainment is already muddied with the kind of individual that makes
a career out of identity theft, spam and phishing."
Equifax offers five tips to help avoid becoming a target for criminals on
social networking sites:
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