Credit Karma To Launch Free ID Monitoring Following Equifax Hack (reuters.com) 24
Credit Karma is launching a new free service that will alert customers if their identity data has been compromised in hacks, the San Francisco-based fintech company said on Friday in the wake of massive breach at credit monitoring agency Equifax. From a report: The new ID monitoring service is being tested and will be available in October, the company said on Friday. Similar to services offered by Symantec-owned LifeLock, CreditKarma will keep track of data breaches and tell customers if they are one of the victims. Customers can then check to use the company's credit monitoring services and flag suspicious activities. The company said it was accelerating the launch of the new service in response to the large data breach at Equifax, where thieves may have stolen personal information of 143 million Americans.
your money was stolen (Score:3)
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Credit Karma can't even get credit reports to work (Score:1)
I've tried them several times since Equifax illegally refuses to give you your once a year free copy of your report, and Credit Karma has never been able to provide it. I really want to see it so much that I'm thinking about paying money to see it. Too bad the morons at Credit Karma are building new software before fixing the garbage they already have.
Re: Credit Karma can't even get credit reports to (Score:1)
Sign up and then cancel. Tell them it wasn't you.
Which person with all your information are they going to believe?
Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
They're doing this out of the goodness of their heart?
Or, is "free" perhaps not entirely true?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
If you've never used CreditKarma, then you don't know. They advertise credit cards and other crap.
This year, they launched a free tax filing service that doesn't try to sell you any crap. Worked quickly and easily and transferred all my info to state without any hassle.
I don't have a problem with their LifeLock equivalent and look forward to continuing to use them.
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But people won't care, use them anyway, the bitch and moan.
Related/Unrelated, the best "identity protection service" I have used is MyIdCare [slashdot.org]. Full disclosure, the first few years were free (thanks OPM), but the amount o
So one more company has my info...... (Score:2)
Maybe a silver lining soon (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Maybe a silver lining soon (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Maybe a silver lining soon (Score:1)
Australia still uses Medicare card numbers for ID
which is insane as they are easy to fake
Re:Maybe a silver lining soon (Score:4, Interesting)
They're tied into a verification system that has only knowledge of the ID as proof. While it's possible to change that, easy to replace the whole system than deal with adding verification to the various systems.
Plus, it's hardly futureproof, since it's so used up (over, what 70% of possible SSNs are currently active) that they are reusing SSNs.
Frankly, having a global id seems pretty bad.
yeah, (Score:2)
but if this service is hacked with all the goodies it tracks?
Big Booh!
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Re: (Score:2, Informative)
You don't give Credit Karma all of your details just enough of them to use in order to identify you.
You give them:
An email address
A password you've never used before
Your legal name
Physical address that would be found on a credit report
Date of birth
Last 4 digits of SSN
With this information they can identify you. They then ask you some multiple choice questions based on the credit history they have access to. Stuff like
Did you get a loan from:
A) Loan company A
B) Loan company B
C) Loan company C
D) None of the a