So, two weeks before Christmas someone broke into my car and took my GPS, two days after New Year’s Day someone used my credit card number to run up $300 on XBOX Live, and one week ago my power supply was taken from my wireless headset at work.
You ever feel violated?
When I first moved to Oregon, in 1998, I had checks stolen from the mailbox. I called the police and filed a report and they told me “I can tell you right now that we won’t be able to put any resources on this… this happens so frequently that we don’t have the manpower to chase all the identity theft and fraud cases.” It took me a full year to put that issue to rest and get everything straightened out, and yet, I know I will never get justice because the police never pursued it.
This string of recent events has me looking more closely at how secure my information is and I’ve been doing some research on some of these identity theft protection companies. I almost feel like I would be entrusting my information to a hacker… what happens if I don’t stay with these companies? Will they sell my information to the highest bidder? How paranoid do I let myself get in the name of security? Is it finally time to move into that closet and let the world pass me by?
Of course not.
More diligence on my part to make up for the lack of commitment from our local “to server… and protect” group and the acceptance that things happen and it will all be okay in the long-run is my best defense at this point. I will likely join one of these protection agencies in order to help safeguard myself and my family; a motion light on the front of the house can act as a deterrent for future auto break-ins and there are always other methods that can be employed. Who knows, maybe this will be the event that forces a home security system?
Life moves on and we can’t let fear keep us from participating.