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11/19/2019

Shred-it Study Reveals Americans Believe Their Information Security Habits Make Them Vulnerable to Fraud

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BANNOCKBURN, ILNov. 18, 2019 /PRNewswire/ - A third (33%) of Americans have been a victim of information fraud or identity theft; however, despite notable data breaches in 2019, when asked if they update or change passwords/PINs after a company they do business with suffers a data breach, more than a quarter (28%) say only sometimes and nearly one in 10 (9%) say they don't update their passwords at all. That's according to Shred-it's second annual International Fraud Awareness Week Report, which exposes consumer information security concerns, trends and habits ahead of International Fraud Awareness Week November 17-23, 2019.

Four in ten (41%) Americans who have been a victim of information fraud or identity theft became one because their credit card number was stolen or used, another 22% reported someone stole their information from physical paper documents (e.g., W-2, mail, paper files at work, etc.) – highlighting a need for improved digital and physical information security – and 20% reported a company they do business with was hacked. However, nearly half (43%) of Americans still have their credit card/financial information stored on a company/brand website for easier or faster checkout and more than a third (35%) store paper documents containing sensitive personal information in an unlocked box, desk drawer or cabinet at home or work, leaving another method of fraud open to occur.

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