Results 1 to 16 of 16

Thread: ATTENTION! Check here to see if your identity has been stolen!

  1. #1
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68

    Arrow ATTENTION! Check here to see if your identity has been stolen!

    There is an associate of mine who spent over 30 years working in the UK for New Scotland Yard in the Major Fraud unit.

    He recently put together a website where you can check to see if any info about you has wound up in the hands of criminals.

    The database is absolutely secure, and contains millions of entries for stolen credit card, bank account info, as well as names addresses, phone numbers, etc.

    Here is the blurb on the front page of the site:


    ARE YOUR PERSONAL DETAILS IN CRIMINAL HANDS?

    Every day the personal details of millions of potential victims of Identity Theft are bought and sold by criminal gangs on the internet. The Lucid Intelligence database contains the details of in excess of forty million people worldwide who have had their personal information compromised by criminals in this way.

    Lucid Intelligence Ltd is the ONLY company that actively identifies such criminal activity and makes it available to the public by way of a FREE search. Whilst we cannot repatriate your data we can tell you what information the criminals have exchanged about you and demonstrate how you can protect yourself against Identity Theft.

    What you do is go to the site and do searches against your personal info. You can do a search for your name only, your phone number only, etc., etc. and it will let you know if any of your personal info has been compromised.

    Lastly, we all know people who are not very savvy about computers or the interweb. They can send and receive emails, turn on and off the computer, and that is about it. They may not be aware that they can lose everything they own just from playing on the internet.

    So pass this link on to them ESPECIALLY, as they are the most likely to be in danger of having their ID stolen and used for criminal purposes. Or just do some searches yourself using names of family members or friends.

    I personally have spoken with many victims of identity theft and internet fraud. It is a serious problem, and hundreds of millions of dollars are lost each year to internet scammers and criminals.

    Check it out.

    https://www.lucidintelligence.com/

  2. #2
    Banned
    132dB's At Your Service

    Member No
    25
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    20' Above Water
    Posts
    10,849
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by lucid intelligence
    Good news! No matching records have been found for the details you entered.
    Quote Originally Posted by lucid intelligence
    You can now search again using different details. Or, if you have now completed all of the searches you wish to do, please bookmark our site and come back soon. Have a look at our FAQs for advice and information to keep yourself safe online. If there is something you want to ask us or tell us, please drop us a note from the contact us page.
    Woo hoo! Scot-free...

  3. #3
    Talks To Trees
    ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

    ZahZoo's Avatar
    Member No
    61
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    3rd Stone From The Sun
    Posts
    8,960
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    10
    Consider for a moment... that this site is an elaborate scam itself..?

    Lure unsuspecting people paranoid about identity theft to come and enter their personal information thinking they're on some secure site looking out for their best interests... while the visitors are willingly entering their info into a fake search engine that's actually collecting the very data they hope is secure...

    Think...
    "If you want to be a monk... you gotta cook a lot of rice...”

  4. #4
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    ...dupe post
    Last edited by Hardrock69; 06-25-2009 at 01:32 PM.

  5. #5
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    Think....would Equifax, Thawt, TrustedID, Verisign and Paypal (among others) partner with a site that was a scam?
    Would former police officers from New Scotland Yard publicly try to scam people?

    I think not.

    Put it this way, the main guy is the real deal. Can't tell you how I know this, but due to some of the work I do on the net, I know his connections to New Scotland Yard, The Feds, and other law enforcement agencies around the world are solid. I have had it proven to me time and time again that he is the real deal.

    Here...a bio for your perusal:

    https://www.lucidintelligence.com/faq-aboutus.php

    Colin Holder - LinkedIn

    Colin Holder

    Colin retired from the Metropolitan Police as a Detective Sergeant after a 30 year career during which time he served on the Flying Squad and Fraud Squad as well as several other specialised postings. For much of the last ten years of his service with the police, Colin was seconded to the Serious Fraud Office, where he participated in several specialised investigations involving international arms and oil shipping frauds. During his service, Colin conducted multi million pound fraud and money laundering investigations in over 25 countries, and was the recipient of numerous Police commendations for his work. He is considered to be one of the world's leading experts on 'Advance Fee' fraud and "Identity Theft" fraud and is a regular speaker at fraud-related conferences on these topics. In 2001 he created the 'Metropolitan Police Fraud Alert' web-site Metropolitan Police Service - Fraud Alert and post retirement he conceived the idea that became Intelligence Information Systems | Homepage the "KYC" and "Money Laundering" compliance database which is now used by many of the major financial institutions. In addition to building the Lucid Intelligence database he is also a Director of Event Intelligence Ltd, a company that specialises in Fraud, Anti- Money Laundering, Background Screening and Due Diligence investigations.


    Problem with todays net culture is that it is so dangerous, that people are likely to be skeptical about a valid security site.

    The cry wolf syndrome.

    Here are answers to any questions people may have:

    https://www.lucidintelligence.com/faq-detail.php


    If this was some bullshit site, or risky in any way, I sure as fuck would not post it here.
    I have known the main guy who created the site for a long time. The site is a valuable tool in today's cyber-world.

  6. #6
    Talks To Trees
    ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

    ZahZoo's Avatar
    Member No
    61
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    3rd Stone From The Sun
    Posts
    8,960
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    10
    Thanks for clearing all that up HR69.

    I'm sure your buddy is legit. I'm a skeptic by nature and a computer security professional by trade. So I tend to think the worst first.

    Carry on...

  7. #7
    Kill A Commie For Mommy
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Kristy's Avatar
    Member No
    7609
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    Denver, Colo
    Posts
    16,334
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    64
    [QUOTE=ZahZoo;1359714]Consider for a moment... that this site is an elaborate scam itself..?/QUOTE]

    BINGO! Someone, anyone who lives near Zoo buy him a six-pack.

  8. #8
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    No worries. If I were some spammer, or someone who has not been around HERE for awhile (however much that counts), it could even be seen as more questionable.

    But it is a site that is the real deal, and I have enough friends here that I would not post something that was not legit.

  9. #9
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    Just for any peeps out there who still do not believe the above is legit, here is a review of the site with more details:

    Lucid Intelligence – A Free Way to Discover If Your Identity Has Been Stolen - Blogcritics Sci/Tech

    Millions of personal and financial records have been compromised in recent years and the criminals involved in trading this information operate worldwide.

    "A criminal might be based in Romania, using servers hosted in Russia, stealing data from people in Germany, to buy goods from an American retailer for delivery in the UK, using an Australian credit card," according to a new site called Lucid Intelligence, which seeks to level the playing field for the individual victims of these crimes.

    Lucid Intelligence has set up a site that has a user-friendly tool that allows a person to see if their personal and or financial information is in the hands of criminals. It then provides resources – that are free for the most part – a person can use to protect themselves. The Lucid Intelligence Database contains the information of over 40 million people who have already been compromised.

    Although, the site freely admits they can't do anything about getting your information back, the truth is that an aware person can take measures to make the information useless (and maybe more dangerous) for criminals to use.

    Some of the ways the site suggests protecting yourself is setting up a Google Alert (detailed instructions included), getting a free credit report, finding some free identity theft protection and protecting your computer. Free options of doing this are identified on the site.

    All of the records in the Lucid database have already been compromised by criminals and made available on the Internet. These stolen details were found in chat rooms, bulletin boards or FTP sites, which are used as underground forums to sell stolen information. Recently, two major reports indicated there is so much stolen information available, the law of supply and demand is causing prices to go down. This would suggest there is a glut of stolen information out there.

    The information is stolen in a variety of ways. It can be stolen by hackers, who compromise a retail or banking system, dishonest employees at a wide variety of places or malicious software delivered by the botnets that "virtually phish" the digital world with billions of spam e-mails. Information can also be stolen when you pay a bill using a card or when an irresponsible employee throws it in trash. Please note, there are other ways information is stolen and I am only listing the more well-known methods.


    A lot of the information in the database has been obtained by the highly skilled operators behind Lucid, who seek out and engage cyber criminals and beat them at their own game. These operators, who come from all walks of life, are volunteers and most (if not all of them) have put a few scammers behind bars.

    There is little doubt that the amount of information in this database is going to grow and, whenever possible, Lucid records exactly where they discovered the information.

    The information you input to do the searches is not maintained by Lucid until you request the detailed summary. There are reasons for this, which I will explain below. The site also doesn't use any cookies that are designed to track activity on a computer. From what I can see, everything associated with the site is designed to protect individual privacy and takes the necessary precautions to stop someone with malicious intent from exploiting the Lucid database itself.

    If the search reveals your information has been compromised, they provide you with a limited summary. For an administrative fee – and only after your identity has been completely verified – they will provide you with all a detailed summary. The administrative fee of £10 (approximately $16.56) to get the detailed summary covers the costs of pulling the information. Included in the detailed summary is an individual risk analysis based on the information discovered.

    In most cases, the limited summary, combined with the protection information, will be sufficient for most people.

    In the past four years, Lucid has turned over the details of every credit card they've discovered to the “Dedicated Cheque and Credit Card Unit” in London and APACS. In turn, this information is turned over to the credit card issuer. Lucid has already provided the details of several hundred thousand compromised credit cards and it is estimated they have saved more than £200,000,000 (approximately $331,250,263) from being stolen. When considering this statistic, we need to remember that the actual card details came from all over the world.

    It should be noted that payment (credit/debit) cards aren't the only type of information available for sale on the Internet. Lucid attempts to report all the information they discover if there is a place to report it to.

    There are good reasons that Lucid doesn't turn these credit card details over to the card issuers directly. Replacing credit cards is costly and sometimes card issuers choose to merely monitor known compromised information and then issue a new card if there is suspected fraudulent activity. By reporting it to the authorities and APACS, Lucid ensures a record is maintained should someone run into complications with an issuer after they have been victimized. Despite all the zero liability ads out there, the sad truth is that not all victims come out of these schemes without losing money (sometimes a lot).


    Another thing the Lucid database might identify is synthetic identity theft before it comes back to haunt a person. Credit reports don't necessarily catch all forms of identity theft. Sometimes different parts of people's identities are used to forge a synthetic one. In these instances, because a lot of the information doesn't match, the credit bureaus don't pick it up.

    Other examples where a credit bureau might not reveal identity theft are medical benefit fraud, employment fraud, government benefit fraud, some forms of check fraud and when it is used to commit crimes of other than a financial nature.

    Another thing to consider is that since not all compromised information is used or used right away, the risk is there, but it will not show up on a credit report.

    The people behind Lucid are also active in dealing with advance fee fraud (419) and the different varieties of this are covered on the site, also.

    Last but not least, if you need further information they have a way to contact a member of the group.

    The site is largely the work of Colin Holder, a retired Detective Sergeant from the United Kingdom, who is considered one of the leading experts in the world on advance fee fraud and identity theft. This isn't the first Web site Colin has set up, either. In 2001, he set up the Metropolitan Police Fraud Alert site and came up with the idea that later became the "KYC" and "Money Laundering" compliance database. His full biography, which is both impressive and extensive, can be found on the site.

  10. #10
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    Just for any peeps out there who still do not believe the above is legit, here is a review of the site with more details:

    Lucid Intelligence – A Free Way to Discover If Your Identity Has Been Stolen - Blogcritics Sci/Tech

    Millions of personal and financial records have been compromised in recent years and the criminals involved in trading this information operate worldwide.

    "A criminal might be based in Romania, using servers hosted in Russia, stealing data from people in Germany, to buy goods from an American retailer for delivery in the UK, using an Australian credit card," according to a new site called Lucid Intelligence, which seeks to level the playing field for the individual victims of these crimes.

    Lucid Intelligence has set up a site that has a user-friendly tool that allows a person to see if their personal and or financial information is in the hands of criminals. It then provides resources – that are free for the most part – a person can use to protect themselves. The Lucid Intelligence Database contains the information of over 40 million people who have already been compromised.

    Although, the site freely admits they can't do anything about getting your information back, the truth is that an aware person can take measures to make the information useless (and maybe more dangerous) for criminals to use.

    Some of the ways the site suggests protecting yourself is setting up a Google Alert (detailed instructions included), getting a free credit report, finding some free identity theft protection and protecting your computer. Free options of doing this are identified on the site.

    All of the records in the Lucid database have already been compromised by criminals and made available on the Internet. These stolen details were found in chat rooms, bulletin boards or FTP sites, which are used as underground forums to sell stolen information. Recently, two major reports indicated there is so much stolen information available, the law of supply and demand is causing prices to go down. This would suggest there is a glut of stolen information out there.

    The information is stolen in a variety of ways. It can be stolen by hackers, who compromise a retail or banking system, dishonest employees at a wide variety of places or malicious software delivered by the botnets that "virtually phish" the digital world with billions of spam e-mails. Information can also be stolen when you pay a bill using a card or when an irresponsible employee throws it in trash. Please note, there are other ways information is stolen and I am only listing the more well-known methods.


    A lot of the information in the database has been obtained by the highly skilled operators behind Lucid, who seek out and engage cyber criminals and beat them at their own game. These operators, who come from all walks of life, are volunteers and most (if not all of them) have put a few scammers behind bars.

    There is little doubt that the amount of information in this database is going to grow and, whenever possible, Lucid records exactly where they discovered the information.

    The information you input to do the searches is not maintained by Lucid until you request the detailed summary. There are reasons for this, which I will explain below. The site also doesn't use any cookies that are designed to track activity on a computer. From what I can see, everything associated with the site is designed to protect individual privacy and takes the necessary precautions to stop someone with malicious intent from exploiting the Lucid database itself.

    If the search reveals your information has been compromised, they provide you with a limited summary. For an administrative fee – and only after your identity has been completely verified – they will provide you with all a detailed summary. The administrative fee of £10 (approximately $16.56) to get the detailed summary covers the costs of pulling the information. Included in the detailed summary is an individual risk analysis based on the information discovered.

    In most cases, the limited summary, combined with the protection information, will be sufficient for most people.

    In the past four years, Lucid has turned over the details of every credit card they've discovered to the “Dedicated Cheque and Credit Card Unit” in London and APACS. In turn, this information is turned over to the credit card issuer. Lucid has already provided the details of several hundred thousand compromised credit cards and it is estimated they have saved more than £200,000,000 (approximately $331,250,263) from being stolen. When considering this statistic, we need to remember that the actual card details came from all over the world.

    It should be noted that payment (credit/debit) cards aren't the only type of information available for sale on the Internet. Lucid attempts to report all the information they discover if there is a place to report it to.

    There are good reasons that Lucid doesn't turn these credit card details over to the card issuers directly. Replacing credit cards is costly and sometimes card issuers choose to merely monitor known compromised information and then issue a new card if there is suspected fraudulent activity. By reporting it to the authorities and APACS, Lucid ensures a record is maintained should someone run into complications with an issuer after they have been victimized. Despite all the zero liability ads out there, the sad truth is that not all victims come out of these schemes without losing money (sometimes a lot).


    Another thing the Lucid database might identify is synthetic identity theft before it comes back to haunt a person. Credit reports don't necessarily catch all forms of identity theft. Sometimes different parts of people's identities are used to forge a synthetic one. In these instances, because a lot of the information doesn't match, the credit bureaus don't pick it up.

    Other examples where a credit bureau might not reveal identity theft are medical benefit fraud, employment fraud, government benefit fraud, some forms of check fraud and when it is used to commit crimes of other than a financial nature.

    Another thing to consider is that since not all compromised information is used or used right away, the risk is there, but it will not show up on a credit report.

    The people behind Lucid are also active in dealing with advance fee fraud (419) and the different varieties of this are covered on the site, also.

    Last but not least, if you need further information they have a way to contact a member of the group.

    The site is largely the work of Colin Holder, a retired Detective Sergeant from the United Kingdom, who is considered one of the leading experts in the world on advance fee fraud and identity theft. This isn't the first Web site Colin has set up, either. In 2001, he set up the Metropolitan Police Fraud Alert site and came up with the idea that later became the "KYC" and "Money Laundering" compliance database. His full biography, which is both impressive and extensive, can be found on the site.

  11. #11
    Banned
    Member No
    5226
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    .
    Posts
    12,707
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    0
    As useful as that site is, I'll continue protecting my privacy the best way there is:

    Knowing what I'm doing, and continually learn about what's going on.

    And that's what everybody should do. I didn't know jack shit about the internet until 2000/2001. Then I learned.

    I don't trust anybody or anything other than myself when it comes to protect what's mine.

    Cheers! :bottle:

  12. #12
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    Goddam double-posts.

  13. #13
    Rock God
    DIAMOND STATUS
    Hardrock69's Avatar
    Member No
    11017
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    A Small Dive in a trashy neighborhood somewhere on Fornax 9
    Posts
    21,833
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    68
    That's the only way to fly.

  14. #14
    roth beer pest
    DIAMOND STATUS
    PETE'S BROTHER's Avatar
    Member No
    22706
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    arizona
    Age
    53
    Posts
    12,682
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    54
    Quote Originally Posted by Imapus Sylicker View Post
    As useful as that site is, I'll continue protecting my privacy the best way there is:

    Knowing what I'm doing, and continually learn about what's going on.

    And that's what everybody should do. I didn't know jack shit about the internet until 2000/2001. Then I learned.

    I don't trust anybody or anything other than myself when it comes to protect what's mine.

    Cheers! :bottle:
    fleshlight
    Another one of those classic genius posts, sure to generate responses. You log on the next day to see what your witty gem has produced to find no one gets it and 2 knotheads want to stick their dicks in it... Well played, sir!!

  15. #15
    Gimme head till I'm dead
    ROTH ARMY WEBMASTER

    Igosplut's Avatar
    Member No
    45
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    Cape Cod Fuckin MA
    Posts
    2,793
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    10
    You know what? I've always said I;d love somebody from the internet to show up at my door. One thing: I have nothing to lose. So bring it on......
    Chainsaw Muthuafucka

  16. #16
    roth beer pest
    DIAMOND STATUS
    PETE'S BROTHER's Avatar
    Member No
    22706
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    arizona
    Age
    53
    Posts
    12,682
    Status
    Offline
    Rep Power
    54
    amen.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Common Identity Thief or Spy?
    By Nickdfresh in forum The Front Line
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 11-02-2007, 11:02 AM
  2. Why Native Identity Matters
    By BigBadBrian in forum The Front Line
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 02-11-2005, 02:18 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •