identity theft and solutions: research for the future dr. milena head associate professor director,...
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Identity Theft and Solutions:Research for the Future
Dr. Milena HeadAssociate Professor
Director, McMaster eBusiness Research Centre (MeRC)
McMaster University
Misusing personal information to …
Open a telephone account
Lease an apartment
Open new credit cards
Obtain passports
Fill out legal documents
Take out loans
What are the implications for victims? Possible loss of money … and more importantly …
reputation False credit reports that can be difficult to correct Average cost per victim is $740 US The average time spent by victims is about 600
hours Lost opportunities False arrests Emotional impact of identity theft
has been found to parallel that of victims of violent crime
How big is the problem? 7 million Americans (3.4% of consumers)
were victims of IDT during the 12 months ending June 2003 79% increase from previous year! FTC states IDT is America’s fasting growing
crime Annual cost in the US is $53B (2003) In Canada, over 600,000 victims during
2003 (3% of consumers) Annual cost in Canada is $21.5M (2003)
How are identities stolen? 34% : obtained or forged credit card 12% : obtained improperly a paper or computer
record with personal information. 11% : stole wallet or purse. 10% : opened charge accounts in stores. 7% : opened a bank account or forged cheques. 7% : got to mail or mailbox. 5% : lost wallet or purse. 4% : went to a public record. 3% : created false IDs.
How is this happening? Dumpster diving Shoulder surfing Bribing Spyware Hacking Online searching of publicly available data Phishing and spoofing
Designed to fool recipients into divulging personal information
Example: password verification request sent by a victim’s “bank”
Example: fake listings on Monster.com
Who are the thieves? A true story … Michelle Thibodeau of Worcester, Mass. took
her 16-year old son to get his learner’s permit He already had a driver’s license! Photo on the license was his father … in jail Teen started getting notices that he was
delinquent in his child support DoR seized part of his grocery store bagger
paycheques After a year of frustration, had to apply for a
new SSN (implications for getting college loans)
Who are the thieves? Should we just be concerned about
hackers?
NO! Most identities stolen from trusted insiders
who already have easy access to private information … 70%!
Acquaintances, friends … even family … 16%!
Theory of Human Identification “Knowledge-based” identification
In possession of information which only that person would be expected to know
“Token-based” identification Recognized by possession of some item
“Biometric” identification Variety of identification techniques which are
based on some physical and difficult-to-alienate characteristics
Are we careless about our private information?
Careless disposal of private information
Careless protection of private information
In a word … YES
Careless protection of private information Passwords are a very weak form of
protection Let’s have an HONEST show of hands 80% select a common password where
possible 67% rarely or never change their passwords 49% of heavy computer users
(more than 10 passwords) write them down
Willing to compromise for a “bribe”! Not isolated to passwords
Careless disposal of private information People increasingly are learning to destroy
paper-based information that can lead to privacy and security breaches But still a major issue
Often don’t think to “shred” the data stored at various locations within the computer
Yes, we can be more careful.
Is it all our fault?
Procedures and processes are careless
Organizations are careless
In a word … NO
Careless business & government practices
Sloppy security practices Easy credit Greater access to personal information Widespread use of SIN as unique customer
identifier Increasing commercial trade in personal
consumer information
And a good policy is not enough!
Theory of Human Identification “Knowledge-based” identification
In possession of information which only that person would be expected to know
“Token-based” identification Recognized by possession of some item
“Biometric” identification Variety of identification techniques which are
based on some physical and difficult-to-alienate characteristics
The clever identity thief … Knows personal information
AND has physical items Tokens can be stolen and altered
OR manufactured
Theory of Human Identification “knowledge-based” identification
In possession of information which only that person would be expected to know
“Token-based” identification Recognized by possession of some item
“Biometric” identification Variety of identification techniques which are
based on some physical and difficult-to-alienate characteristics
The promise …… to unequivocally identify individuals
The hurdles …
… technology, infrastructure, privacy
StakeholdersIdentity
Protector
IdentityIssuer
IdentityChecker
IdentityOwner
IdentityThief
From Wang, Yuan and Archer (2004)
StakeholdersIdentity
Protector
IdentityIssuer
IdentityChecker
IdentityOwner
IdentityThief
Role Legally own and use ID
Responsibilities Safeguard ID Fast victim recovery to reduce loss Legally use ID
StakeholdersIdentity
Protector
IdentityIssuer
IdentityChecker
IdentityOwner
IdentityThief
Role Authenticate and issue ID
Responsibilities Issue secured certificates Protect ID certificate & information Protect ID owner and checker
StakeholdersIdentity
Protector
IdentityIssuer
IdentityChecker
IdentityOwner
IdentityThief
Role Authenticate ID and provide services
Responsibilities ID authentication Provide services to real ID owner Protect ID information Protect ID owner
StakeholdersIdentity
Protector
IdentityIssuer
IdentityChecker
IdentityOwner
IdentityThief
Role Protect and prosecute
Responsibilities Legislate Enforce laws Protect ID owners Educate and guide Provide technical solutions Record and track complaints and detect trends
IDT Prevention Activities
IdentityProtector
IdentityIssuer
IdentityChecker
IdentityOwner
IdentityThief
Guidance
Education
Guidance
IDT AlertIDT Alert
Self Protection
PreventionPolicies & TechPrevention
Policies & Tech.
McMaster eBusiness Research Centre (MeRC)
Established in 2000 Part of the Ontario Research Network in e-
Commerce (ORNEC) How we define eBusiness
We believe that the “e” will disappear. We are focused on business innovation in the
networked economy Our mission: focus on research, education
and outreach
Research Interdisciplinary research Research groups have developed expertise in
areas of: Identity Theft Privacy Security Trust Consumer Behaviour Mobile Commerce eHealth Portals
Online Negotiation Supply Chain
Management Interface Design eLearning Change Management Knowledge Management among others …
Education Providing graduates with the managerial and
technical knowledge demanded and necessary in the electronic marketplace Undergraduate eBusiness courses eBusiness MBA specialization PhD (currently 12 candidates engaged in eBusiness
research)
Co-op, internship, full time placements Opportunities for course projects
Outreach Providing an interface to facilitate dialogue
between academics and business leaders Distributing research papers and reports eBusiness Seminar series Industry speakers in the classroom On-site executive training programs On-line courses for SMEs Supply Chain Symposium World Congress Conference eCase Competition
ID Theft as a Flagship Project
Funds assigned by the ORNEC Board of IDT ….
3 Expressions of Interest developed
$1.9 Million!
Project 1: Defining and Measuring IDT Scattered and incomplete Canadian data Research questions:
What types of stats should be gathered? How? How can businesses be encouraged to report
IDT? How can technology help to gather stats? What are the various jurisdictions doing? What is the magnitude and nature of IDT? What are the real costs of IDT to consumers,
businesses, governments, and the economy?
Project 2: Management Approaches to Combating IDT Research questions:
How does IDT affect trust? What are the direct and indirect costs? What are the risks? What is the “business case” for stakeholders? Are current policies & practices effective? What are the “leak-points”? What are the costs/benefits of
countermeasures? What is the effectiveness of various multi-party
approaches? How can employee attitudes be improved?
Project 3: Technical Tools to Address IDT Some available technical solutions: digital
signatures, PKI, smartcards, biometrics Research questions:
How effective are alternative tech solutions? What is the impact on privacy and other social
values? How can security systems be designed to give
consumers informed choice in the level of security they are provided?
Who will manage biometric information? How can reputation management systems
build trustworthiness? How can user profiling effectively detect IDT?
And the last word by William Shakespeare …
Who steals my purse steals trash…
But he that fliches from me my good name
.... makes me poor indeed
- from Othello