Reader: Stolen laptop! How do I protect my identity?

Wed Apr 2, 2008 5:28PM EDT

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Reader Arash writes: Today my laptop was stolen, along with my TV. I used that computer for online shopping and bank account checking, and I am worried whether my identity can be stolen from the laptop. The people who broke into my house are probably the neighborhood kids, because they only took those two things, not the other electronics in my room. They probably aren't after my identity, but who knows, maybe they'll sell it to someone who is. What precautions should I take to prevent identity theft? I've already changed my email password and my bank passwords.

The most common computer crime isn't virus attacks or hackers breaking into your network. It's laptop theft. And as Arash notes, it offers one-stop shopping for anyone who can smash a window and grab a computer.

I won't rehash advice here on protecting your laptop from theft and the importance of encrypting data. This post assumes it's too late, and the laptop is gone. Preventive measures are a topic for another day.

Acting quickly is key when it comes to preventing identity theft. You're right to have taken the first step already, which is to change every password you can think of. If you have a copy of your bookmarks file (it's a good idea to make a backup), go through and systematically change every login password on the list. It's not just banks and email accounts that will need updates, but also shopping sites (like eBay and Amazon) and social networking sites, too. Remember that a crook won't need your actual password to get into any of these places if you've used "remember me" on the site or have set browser or toolbar auto-fill features to automatically enter passwords for you. One click could be all it takes to order thousands of dollars worth of merchandise on your behalf. It's also a good idea to go through your old credit card statements to make sure you've gotten every website you've done business with in the last six to 12 months.

Your next step should be to cancel and replace your credit cards-at least any you've ever used online. Even if you think you've changed all your passwords, chances are that you've missed one. Getting a new credit card takes minutes and provides pretty much foolproof protection.

After you line up your new cards, add a fraud alert message to your credit report. It can help to protect you if someone tries to open a new account under your name. A fraud alert still lets you open new accounts, but it requires that creditors take extra steps to verify that you are who you say you are. An initial security alert stays on your account for 90 days. You can file an extended alert (for seven years) later if you are victimized. Phone numbers for each credit agency are at the bottom of this post. Note that you may need a current copy of your credit report in order to file the alert. 

Now that things have settled down, file a police report and get a copy of it-this is critical if you're filing an insurance claim. Since your laptop was stolen during a break-in, your local police department is the place to call. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) handles many computer crimes but probably won't get involved unless you're actually a victim of identity theft. (If you are, visit this site.) Hopefully, if you've followed these instructions, that won't be the case!

Finally, keep an eye on Craigslist and eBay for your laptop. You'd be shocked by how many stolen laptops are unloaded on these sites, often very quickly. If you see a listing that matches your machine (especially if you can verify that it really is yours), alert the authorities and see if they can help you recover it. Good luck.

Credit agency phone numbers:
Experian: 800-493-1058
Equifax: 866-640-2273
TransUnion: 800-916-8800

Comments on Reader: Stolen laptop! How do I protect my identity?

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  • 26 Posted by goalisoul on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Well first and foremost, a lock only keeps out an honest man. Second do as I did. I have a mobile broadband card built into my laptop onto the board. It can't be removed without taking the laptop apart. I can track it through my service provider using their GPS feature. If it is stolen all I should have to do is get with the police and login to my service account and track my laptop, kinda like "Lojack" for laptops. I don't use the "remember me" feature just because of the risk of theift. I don't mind having to enter the information each login.

  • 27 Posted by vermaanen on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    When you have a laptop with confidentional information you should use total protection for data from McAfee on your laptop. With this solution nobody but yourself will be able to open the labtop. Even if they try to get your hard disk out of the computer to read the information you installed on it they will not be able to do so since all the information is encrypted. So one advise for next labtop:TOTAL PROTECTION FOR DATA FROM MCAFEE

  • 28 Posted by mace2oo2 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    Oh Please, unless you have a Word Document with all your passwords to what websites saved on your computer, they couldn't steal your credit cards from you using them online. Your credit card number isn't stored on your computer, it's stored on the website's computer. Telling people to cancel Every credit card they used online is retarded and makes no sense. The only thing that I would actually be worried about that isn't even mentioned in this retarded article would be if you had quickbooks or an accounting program that somebody could use to get your bank account information or print checks.

  • 29 Posted by ffeshara on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:59PM EDT Report Abuse

    well darn, you have to do all those things if your laptop get stolen. I rather stop using laptop and actually I don't want to go online anymore. goodbye internet. file police report, cancel all credit card, travel to japan, build a pyramid in india, push a 1000lb truck across the country, do 1000000 push ups and run 200000 miles and swim with the whales.

  • 31 Posted by gpbryant2003 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:11PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have had two laptops stolen, exactly a year apart, from my house in Duarte (when I lived there a few yrs back) - I moved. First my car and purse, then two laptops, camera, palm pilot, - and the neighbors who claimed to have neighborhood watch never saw one thing. The laptops were never recovered; I contacted pawn shops to no avail. I wouldn't do on-line banking on a lap top though, not after what I've been through. The Sheriff Dept. told me the thefts were not high priority; basically to tell you the truth they didn't care.

  • 32 Posted by crankiehamster on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    Posted by mvsch2003 on Thu Apr 3, 2008 12:13PM EDT Report Abuse I have have this happen before and what I do now is 1. I put a password on all window accounts. 2. Do not use the password reminder in Firefox 3. Use Roboform with log in password enabled as you need a password before the info is filled in in the webpage. Thx I can get around your windows password in a few minutes rofl.Don't think that protects you.

  • 33 Posted by villagespring on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    Just be reasonable and smart: don't keep personal information in insecure documents, keep passwords and other personal information in an encrypted file such as KeePass with a strong password, use the sign-in feature on your browser's automatic fill-in if you use it, and use passwords to get into your computer and desktop. What's so difficult with that? When I put backups of my secure files in another location, which I rarely need to download or open anyway, I put them into an encrypted PGP file with extremely strong password. Oh yes, if I lived in Oakland and my grandmother was 'watching' my house, I'd probably put an electronic lock onto the door. And I wouldn't let Mormons, or Jahovahs Witnesses or Hari Krishnas or any of those other godmen into my house in any case.

  • 34 Posted by earl.bagwell on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    The comment by burnloungaz to get a new SSAN I believe is incorrect. The Social Security office does not just hand out a new ssan for a stolen laptop that belongs to an individual. Keep all sensitive information off the computer or have an encryption software installed. Make all your passwords difficult. Do make a police report and notify the credit reporting agencies, your bank and credit cards of the theft if the information was on the computer. It would be wise to invest in an Identity Theft monitoring and restoration service that monitors and restores more that just financial identity theft.

  • 35 Posted by ssombret007 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    Now, for the people that haven't had this happen yet, NEVER auto save passwords, or auto fill passwords, it is good practice for typing anyways, don't store social security numbers etc. on your computer. Password your user login. Prevention is key, clean up is last resort. The real question is even after all this, can a real haker find history of every key stroke on your PC to put together credit card numbers etc. ? This is something I have heard of, maybe just the movies. Last but not least change your passwords regularly.

  • 36 Posted by dj_tlc_fizzle on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    So, I take it a lot of people don't about lo jacking systems for computers ? I just recently bought a Dell inspiron 1525 and through them I purchased a 1 year subscription for 'Computrace Lo/Jack for Laptops,' by AbsoluteSoftware. And before my year is up I can exstend the warranty/service. The software is a computer theft protection service that tracks, and locates and recovers stolen computers. The software works behind the scene to recover your laptop if it ever gets stolen. If it does get stolen this is what you do .... You first file a police report and call their recovery team. When your stolen computer contacts their monitoring center it is placed on high alert and it stars calling in every 15 minutes, allowing their recovery team to closely track your computer's location. Their recovery team provides law enforcement with tracking information and documentations essential for procuring search warrants and leading them to the location of your computer. Then law enforcements recover your laptop and returns it to you.

  • 37 Posted by damidget0016 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:34PM EDT Report Abuse

    I hate to be the bearer of bad news here, but if your laptop is stolen, there is a good chance that a windows password will be bypassed easily. I am not saying this is always the case, but if it is a pro that has taken the laptop, then he/she probably knows how to hack. I am very computer literate and I have seen what is out there, I know hackers and I know the programs they have used. If you read the news, you will notice that a mac was hacked into in about 2 minutes. Also about the lo-jac service, what most people don't realize is that if you hit alt-control-delete, then you can actually shut off the process that runs the program, if the program is not running, then your laptop cannot be tracked. I am saying this due to the fact that I actually do want to help people out, as someone said before the best way to avoid this is simply not to buy a laptop. But if your like me and you need one to pretty much survive, don't keep anything extremely vital on it, write it down on a piece of paper and keep it in a safe, your much better off.

  • 38 Posted by sweskiworld on Mon Apr 21, 2008 4:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    Just changing passwords on your bank account wont do it. You need to close your account and have them reopen it using a new account number. If you think you may have your Social Security Number and or drivers license number on the computer, you need to see about having those numbers changed also. The inital advice given by the editor really says it best. By all means, notify the three credit agencies so they can flag your records and prevent any new accounts being opened using your SS and drivers license numbers. A good hacker can find anything on your computer, even if you think it is hidden, password protected or deleted. CYA ! and do ir right now !

  • 39 Posted by lbrysie on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    let it go!! and buy again,., hehehe,., that's it!!!

  • 41 Posted by justxploring on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with mace2002. Unless you actually have a document stored with all of your user IDs, passwords, bank accounts, stores you've shopped at along with the credit card information, it's unlikely that a thief will be able to access this information very easily. I never store passwords anyway. There are sites that store credit card information, but you aren't liable for fraudulent purchases over $50 per card anyway. Never use a password that is very obvious like your birthday or pet's name and if you use the name of a favorite rock song or character in a book or movie, don't go around telling everyone in the neighborhood what it is! I really like the bank sites that ask "secret questions" and I never register my computer so I'm prompted to answer them every time I sign on. It's safer and only takes 10 more seconds to type what street you grew up on or your first grade teacher's name. My advice is to check accounts regularly, put "alerts" on your credit cards so you are notified by email or phone if a certain limit is spent at any one time and only use online banks that offer added security. Anyway, if your laptop is stolen, the first thing you should do it change your passwords, but canceling credit cards is a little extreme and this article goes a little too far with all its advice. Just use some common sense when you shop online.

  • 42 Posted by the_madness91 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    While I can ascertain you trying to help people with this post... You may also cause more harm than good. Unless people have saved their passwords on a word file, or have it written somewhere on their computer, or have signed up for fast checkout services at bestbuy.com etc... wherby your credit info. is saved to your account and you haven't deleted your cookies you are safe. Telling people to cancel all of their credit cards used or issuing alerts on their credit is more harmful than beneficial. Thieves cannot get credit card info. if you bought something from amazon.com like 2 months ago. The credit card number you entered is ssl encrypted by amazon.com and stored in their secure server not on your laptop. All the thieves can really gain from most people's laptops is if they save tax information files in hard drive or etc... Otherwise, thieves have a 0% chance of buying stuff online from your laptop. Instead to anyone who owns a laptop, when your done surfing the web, delete browsing history and clear cookies. Also defragment hard drive routinely. Thats about it.

  • 43 Posted by shadowlink77 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    Windows based computers are easy to hack into and change. Don't rely on windows password services to protect you. All I have to do is restart the computer and run it in safe mode and set up the admin account to cancel out your old account. As for info, delete cookies and password data. Don't something precious on your computer unless you really really trust your encryption software (don't trust it). One of the best tricks for hiding important files is give them pseudo names and then rename the file extension (ie. Tax Form 2006.pdf to IMEkr8v2.dll). Also keep your important files in a very out of the way place. Most people are not going to go into C:/Windows/system32/IME/imekr8 Then you can access them at any time by renaming the file and going into that file location but make sure you delete your file History. It's easy to do and can help a lot. Set up scheduled De-fragmenting sessions and let your computer run through it often. If your laptop has a finger print scanner use it. It's harder to break a code saved by bio data then just data. Those are simple things that can detour identity theft. People can go through any history you allow to be saved, not what is not saved. Your keystrokes are saved as well so yes someone can find out what you have been typing but when you delete your History it deletes that as well. There have been good suggestions here, much better then most. As a hacker who helps out at a several places I can attest to the power people have to break into computers. It's easy but simple things make it a lot harder. Do you think they'll look for .dll files or .pdf files for online tax forms? Ok my long rant be over. It's easy to break into a computer but it's also easy to protect your identity and money. Keep that in mind.

  • 44 Posted by shadowlink77 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    Windows based computers are easy to hack into and change. Don't rely on windows password services to protect you. All I have to do is restart the computer and run it in safe mode and set up the admin account to cancel out your old account. As for info, delete cookies and password data. Don't something precious on your computer unless you really really trust your encryption software (don't trust it). One of the best tricks for hiding important files is give them pseudo names and then rename the file extension (ie. Tax Form 2006.pdf to IMEkr8v2.dll). Also keep your important files in a very out of the way place. Most people are not going to go into C:/Windows/system32/IME/imekr8 Then you can access them at any time by renaming the file and going into that file location but make sure you delete your file History. It's easy to do and can help a lot. Set up scheduled De-fragmenting sessions and let your computer run through it often. If your laptop has a finger print scanner use it. It's harder to break a code saved by bio data then just data. Those are simple things that can detour identity theft. People can go through any history you allow to be saved, not what is not saved. Your keystrokes are saved as well so yes someone can find out what you have been typing but when you delete your History it deletes that as well. There have been good suggestions here, much better then most. As a hacker who helps out at a several places I can attest to the power people have to break into computers. It's easy but simple things make it a lot harder. Do you think they'll look for .dll files or .pdf files for online tax forms? Ok my long rant be over. It's easy to break into a computer but it's also easy to protect your identity and money. Keep that in mind.

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