10 More Steps to Protect Yourself from Identity Theft
- Burn or shred, with a cross shredder, any mail or financial papers with your personal information on it. Never recycle them.
- Call 1-888-5OPTOUT and ask to stop credit card companies from sending pre-approved credit card applications to your house. They are ticking identity theft time bombs.
- Ask your credit card firm to cease delivery of "convenience checks." They, too, are ticking time bombs.
- You're entitled to one free credit report each year. Get it as soon as possible and review it carefully.
- Order a credit report a month or more before you make a big purchase or apply for credit, to be sure there are no surprises in your history.
- Hassle companies that ask for personal information, such as your phone number at a checkout line. The harder we make it on companies, the less they will be inclined to continue the practice.
- It's impossible to tell what's real and what's fake online. Just delete any e-mail that asks for personal information.
- Just hang up on telemarketers, particularly ones who seem to be fishing for personal information, like your birthday.
- Limit the number of credit cards you hold, and religiously inspect your financial statements each month. Consumer rights quickly fade over time; the sooner you discover an identity theft incident, the better.
- Most of the time, you can't prevent an ID theft incident from occurring, because two-thirds of the time, some company that leaked the data is to blame. So be prepared, and be organized. Save paper bank records for a year, at least. You'll need them to prove your account balance in the event of a ID theft incident.

