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Vigilance pays off

If an employee with access to sensitive personal information decides to steal yours, there's nothing you can do to prevent it. However, some simple steps can help protect your identity from opportunists and criminals who don't have inside access.

Take control of your personal information. You don't have to get junk mail or telemarketing calls -- opt out. Annual privacy notices allow consumers the opportunity to eliminate information sharing. To make certain your name is not shared, mail this privacy "opt out" form letter to your creditors and banking institutions.

Monitor your credit accounts carefully, so you'll know if a bill's missing or unauthorized purchases have been made. Close out unused credit cards. Cutting them up is not enough. Also, stay on top of your bank accounts, reconciling your checkbook monthly.

You may want to consider putting a fraud alert on your credit files. With a fraud alert, a credit bureau is supposed to contact you before any new credit can be approved. Unfortunately, fraud alerts are not foolproof. Again, vigilance counts!

NEXT: Stop scammers in their tracks
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