For the most part, this brochure is fairly uneventful and you didn't miss much if in fact you did just toss it in the trash - or in your blue recycling bin. But one item I did find interesting is that:
I thought that this would be a great opportunity to talk about how just simply recycling is not the same as securely shredding documents. Throwing sensitive documents in the recycling bin or even in the trash does not protect you from dumpster divers. There is big business for dumpster divers who are just conniving and devious enough to want to search through your trash.Beginning January 1, 2009, multifamily homes with 50 units or more and commercial properties of 10,000 square feet or more are required to recycle. Then on January 1, 2010, all residents and businesses are required to recycle. Some exemptions will be granted.
Just about anything can be of value to these lowlifes. From items that seem pretty innocent: grocery lists, birthdays cards, and sticky notes. To other items of higher value: phone bills, cable bills, gas & electricity bills, and bank statements.
These identity thieves will use the information on the innocent items noted above to provide a level of familiarity with potential identity theft victim. For example: A thief may ascertain your child's name and birthday from a discarded birthday card along with the name and address of whoever sent it - perhaps grandma and grandpa. This familiarity often lowers the guard of the victim and loosens them up to readily providing needed information to an identity thief via a phone call. If the identity thief also has possession of an old phone bill, there is greater opportunity to pry from an unsuspecting victim more valuable information such as passwords, account numbers, and social security numbers.
If you leave the door open just a crack, leave it to the criminal mind to put two and two together in an attempt to steal your identity.
This is not only important to individuals, but it is also extremely important that business protect their employees, their customers, and themselves.
Remember, your trash, including your recycling bin, when left on the curb is open to public viewing.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the decision California vs. Greenwood that the "expectation of privacy in trash left for collection in an area accessible to the public... is unreasonable."
Consequently, when you throw something in the trash, anyone that happens to come across your documents is able to take whatever they like. It's great to recycle. But be sure to protect yourself against identity theft by properly destroying your documents before you send them to the recycling bin.
Regards,
Mike
