Identity Thief

I saw the film ‘Identity Thief’ last night. It’s a comedy about a mild mannered business man who has his identity stolen by a seemly harmless female crook.

Interestingly it begins with the victim receiving a phone call about signing up to a service protecting against identity theft.

The victim then gives the caller all the information necessary to steal his identity – which the crook duly does.

The security message here is not to give out your (or anyone else’s) information on the phone without verifying the caller is legitimate.

In the film the victim has all his cards maxed out, is accused of various crimes commited by the thief and is suspended from his job.

He then goes on a trip to catch the baddie and bring her back to his local police – with various ‘adventures’ along the way…

Worth seeing: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2024432/

Do they really look like that?

There’s an interesting article on the bbc web site today about photos being stolen and used on the internet and for fake social media profiles. It highlights the case of a fashion blogger whose images are repeatedly stolen and their efforts to have these images removed.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20641193

It just goes to show that you can never tell what will happen to your image once it’s on the internet.