Be careful what you put on the internet! As I've learned! You could get ripped off, like Jeremy Clarkson
As Megan and I learned, you need to be careful what you put on the internet. On the 15th of December we discovered that some poor woman in England was posting pictures of our son Liam on baby websites saying that he was her son... The investigation is still in process.
It was not surprising to read the story below on boingboing.
Jeremy Clarkson, a presenter for Top Gear on British TV, wrote a newspaper editorial that accused privacy activists of being hysterical over giant data-leaks (such as the British government repeatedly losing CDs bearing the financial details for 25 million households). To prove that identity theft wasn't a big deal, he included his bank account details in the article.
Whereupon someone promptly began making fraudulent withdrawals from his account.
LinkClarkson, 47, writing in his column in the Sunday Times, decried the furore last year after CDs disappeared containing the banking details of 7 million families.
The loss led to fears of mass identity theft with people's bank accounts open to internet scams.
At the time he wrote: "I have never known such a palaver about nothing. The fact is we happily hand over cheques to all sorts of unsavoury people all day long without a moment's thought. We have nothing to fear."
However, yesterday he told readers he had opened his bank statement to find a direct debit had been set up in his name and £500 taken out of his account.
"The bank cannot find out who did this because of the Data Protection Act and they cannot stop it from happening again," he said. "I was wrong and I have been punished for my mistake."
(Image: crop from Books, a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike photo from William Hook's Flickr stream)
Technorati tags: identity+theft, Jeremy Clarkson, internet, abuse, careful
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