- Related Stories
-
Microsoft on ID theft watch
July 12, 2005 -
Banks to share ID theft data with FTC
July 6, 2005 -
Ripples continue from massive data breach
June 23, 2005 -
Mitigating identity theft
April 14, 2005 -
Is identity theft inevitable?
March 31, 2005
Twenty-eight percent of victims have been unsuccessful in restoring their reputations, despite trying for more than a year on average, the Nationwide Mutual Insurance said in a report released Tuesday. The survey, which polled close to 1,100 victims, indicated that people spend an average of 81 hours working to resolve their cases.
"The survey shows that recovering from identity theft can be difficult, costly and stressful, but what is most alarming is that despite the time, money and personal duress victims go through, resolution is not always achieved," Kirk Herath, an associate general counsel at Nationwide Mutual, said in a statement.
More than half of all victims discovered the identity fraud themselves after noticing fraudulent credit card charges or withdrawn funds, the report indicated. It took respondents an average of five-and-a-half months after the first incident to discover the crime. Just 17 percent were notified by a creditor or bank of suspicious activity on their account.
The average sum of charges made to victims' accounts as a result of identity theft was $3,968, according to the survey. While most respondents were not held liable for the charges, 16 percent report that they had to shoulder some or all of the cost. Forty percent of respondents listed police, banks or credit issuers as difficult to work with when attempting to resolve the problem.
The high-tech industry is increasingly in the crosshairs of the identity theft debate. That's because vulnerable computer systems at some major companies have recently exposed hundreds of thousands of consumers to possible data theft. Security breaches
Although the industry claims that a small percentage of identity theft cases begin online, a separate survey indicates such incidents are starting to dent the confidence of online shoppers. Three out of four Web shoppers
In another survey by The Conference Board, 54 percent of online consumers said they more concerned about the security of their personal data now than they were a year ago.
See more CNET content tagged:
identity theft,
survey,
victim,
bank,
security



with a bank that was a bank error, to no avail. About every year
or so, the bank gets sold, or someone decides to clean house
and this outstanding balance gets shuffled off to the collection
agency. Many days and phone calls later I convince everyone
that it is not my charge and that it was origianlly a bank error.
However noone seems to go back into the system to actually
clean up the mess, so I sit waiting for the next round, that I am
sure will show up in 12-18 months.
I can only imagine what it would be like with a whole host of
transactions and multiple players involved. I can't get one
charge with one bank in my own account cleared up.
-Chris