WASHINGTON, D.C. -- (June 21) -- The Federal
Trade Commission (
www.ftc.gov)
today told the U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means, Subcommittee
on Social Security that to prevent thieves from obtaining
consumers’ personal information, including Social
Security numbers (SSNs), and using it to steal identities,
government and businesses should collect only information
that is necessary to meet clear legal or business needs,
and protect the data they do collect. Other steps to reduce
identity theft should include improved authentication techniques,
which ensure that consumers are who they claim to be.
Joel Winston, Associate Director of the FTC’s Division
of Privacy and Identity Protection, told the committee
“SSNs play an important role in our economy. With
300 million American consumers, many of whom share the
same name, the unique 9-digit SSN is a key identification
tool for businesses, government, and others.” The
testimony describes the various uses of SSNs. For example,
consumer reporting agencies use SSNs in credit reports
and “businesses and other entities use those reports
in making eligibility and pricing decisions for a variety
of products and services, including as credit, insurance,
home rentals or employment.” In addition, city,
county, and state governments use SSNs for such things
as birth and death records, tax records, and voter registrations.
“As these records are increasingly placed online,
access to large stores of SSNs becomes easier and less
costly.”
The result of the widespread use and ready availability
of SSNs means that they are more accessible to scammers
who could obtain and use them to commit identity theft,
the testimony says. “The challenge is to find the
proper balance between the need to keep SSNs out of the
hands of identity thieves and the need to give business
and government entities sufficient means to attribute
information to the correct person.”
The testimony states that in addition to federal laws
designed to protect consumers’ sensitive information,
including the FTC Act, The Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions
Act, The Safeguards Rule, and the Health Information Portability
and Accountability Act, the presidentially appointed Identity
Theft Task Force has forwarded “recommendations
on ways to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of
the government’s activities in the areas of identity
theft awareness, prevention, detection, and prosecution.”
The Task Force made five recommendations to restrict
unnecessary uses of SSNs by the federal government:
* The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) should review
the use of SSNs in collecting data from agencies and take
steps to eliminate, restrict, or conceal their use wherever
possible.
* OPM should issue guidance to agencies on how to restrict,
conceal, or mask SSNs in employee records.
* The Social Security Administration should develop “best
practices” for minimizing the use and display of
SSNs.
* The Office of Management and Budget should complete
its analysis of its survey of agency uses of SSNs.
* The Task Force should work with state and local governments
to explore ways to eliminate unnecessary use and display
of SSNs.
The Task Force also recommended that the FTC and other
Task Force agencies review the use of SSNs in the private
sector and the extent to which it is driven by business
necessity, as opposed to convenience or habit, assess
the costs of requiring businesses to use alternate identifiers,
and make recommendations to the president on whether additional
steps should be taken regarding the use of SSNs.
“To prevent thieves from obtaining sensitive information,
government and the business community should, first, limit
the information they collect and maintain from or about
consumers – including SSNs – to that necessary
to meet clear legal or business needs, and second, to
better protect the data they do collect. In addition,
to keep thieves from using information they do procure
to steal identities, consumer authentication techniques
must be improved,” the testimony concludes.
The Commission vote authorizing the presentation of the
testimony and its inclusion in
the formal record was 5-0. A copy of the testimony can
be found on the FTC’s Web site and as a link to
this press release.
Copies of the testimony are available from the FTC’s
Web site at http://www.ftc.gov and from the FTC’s
Consumer Response Center, Room 130, 600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. The FTC works for the consumer
to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business
practices in the marketplace and to provide information
to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file
a complaint in English or Spanish or to get free information
on any of 150 consumer topics, call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP
(1-877-382-4357), or use the complaint form at http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/complaint.shtm.
The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft,
and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel,
a secure, online database available to more than 1,600
civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S.
and abroad.
SOURCE: Federal Trade Commission