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AR15.COM
9/28/2007 5:49:42 PM EDT
Yeah, that is the guy who gives his SS# on TV and the website.

What can you tell me about this company or feel free to make any recommendations to a better service.
9/28/2007 5:52:47 PM EDT
[#1]
Lifelock takes advantage of the current laws regarding your rights to place a fraud watch on all 3 credit bureaus.  No one can get credit in your name without the creditor calling a number you put on your report.

In addition, they will use the opt-out laws to end pre-approved credit solicitations.

You could do all this yourself by mail or electronicly if you wanted to, for a small fee, Lifelock does it for you.

9/29/2007 8:18:33 AM EDT
[#2]

Quoted:
I saw the TV commercial a while back and looked into it.  Found an interesting article.......

www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2007-05-31/news/what-happened-in-vegas/1


Wow, the guy is both a thief and identity thief. I would have never guessed.
10/6/2007 8:50:09 AM EDT
[#3]
Read this though.......



There are a lot of people who don’t like what LifeLock is doing. And those people all work for or own the big three credit reporting agencies (Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion) and the lawyers, lobbyists and other paid shills who represent them. The primary businesses of the credit bureaus is selling our personal information to credit card, mortgage and other credit-issuing companies. They are one of the primary facilitators of identity theft and credit fraud.

Bureaus don’t like services like LifeLock because they pull people out of their information-selling machine. LifeLock is a direct threat to their revenue.

Is this enough of an incentive for the bureaus to organize a hit job on a company?

I don’t particularly like what Maynard did in the past. It’s good that he’s no longer with the company, which can now focus on its core business of helping people try to fight what the credit bureaus are doing with their personal information. I also don’t think it is a good idea for venture funds to invest in companies founded by people who have been convicted of committing fraud, or most other crimes. Maynard should never have started another company that had anything to do with consumer credit, and the VCs should have only invested if he was completely out of the company.

I’ll probably never know who sent me that well organized, methodical email, or what motivation they had for getting the stories written. But I do know this: after researching this story, I’m more afraid of the credit bureaus and their perverse business models than ever before.




Written by this guy, independant econ educated lawyer.



Break out the tinfoil if you want, but it looks like this may not be a scam. Seems they, like McDonalds, provide a service. You may indeed be able to do it for yourself, but you will indeed get what you pay for.






10/6/2007 9:22:56 AM EDT
[#4]

Quoted:
They did a follow up article with some more info -
www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2007-07-19/news/money-for-nothing/full


Good article. Anyone interested in understanding identity theft and prevention... This is a good primer.
10/26/2007 7:26:42 AM EDT
[#5]

Quoted:

Quoted:
I saw the TV commercial a while back and looked into it.  Found an interesting article.......

www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2007-05-31/news/what-happened-in-vegas/1


Wow, the guy is both a thief and identity thief. I would have never guessed.


I don't think I like this....

Maynard claimed he got the idea for LifeLock after spending a week in jail in 2003. The pair have told his story ever since as a frightening example of what can happen to victims of identity theft. The details vary slightly in articles and television news reports, but the story goes something like this:

A few years ago, Maynard answered a knock on his door in Phoenix one morning to find five deputies holding a warrant for his arrest. They accused him of failing to pay back a $16,000 casino loan to the Mirage in Las Vegas and, despite his protests, hauled him off to the Maricopa County Jail. Maynard had not even been in Vegas when the casino made its loan. One of the guys who stole Maynard's identity and the casino's money is now doing time for murder. Maynard was released after seven days, but he spent more than $20,000 and countless hours on the telephone trying to clear his name. While sitting in his jail cell, he came up with the plan for LifeLock so other people could avoid being victimized by identity thieves.

(LATER in the article)

Maynard did, in fact, spend a week in jail in 2003 because of an unpaid $16,000 casino marker drawn from the Mirage.
It was Maynard's marker. The casino took a copy of his Arizona driver's license when he took out the loan.
There was no identity theft.

10/26/2007 7:29:40 AM EDT
[#6]
So how then does one proceed if they wish do go it alone? I guess you just have to call one of the three major credit bureaus TransUnion, Experian or Equifax (that one bureau you contact will inform the other two) every 3 months. Any other tips?
10/26/2007 7:35:34 AM EDT
[#7]
I had my identity stolen once. My life is so bad, the guy sued me!
10/26/2007 7:45:42 AM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:
I had my identity stolen once. My life is so bad, the guy sued me!


Sorry to hear that.

What precautions are you taking now?
11/1/2007 7:31:55 AM EDT
[#9]
Anyone?
11/1/2007 8:00:29 AM EDT
[#10]

Quoted:
tag to read all of those articles later


+1.
11/1/2007 9:10:07 AM EDT
[#11]
height=8
Quoted:
Clark Howard's Credit Freeze Guide

Thanks for the link!
Have a piece of raisin pie.
11/1/2007 9:13:06 AM EDT
[#12]
The CEO is a crook.  He even ripped off his own father for $45k+ in identity theft. (His dad is a doctor, he has the same name, Jr and Sr)

Also, guess who ran radio ads for him?


FRED THOMPSON!!!

Nice work, vouching for a felon Fred, did Hillary teach you that?
11/2/2007 6:14:39 PM EDT
[#13]
BTT
11/9/2007 1:09:03 PM EDT
[#14]

Quoted:
Clark Howard's Credit Freeze Guide



Here's all the content:

Clark's Credit Freeze Guide

Credit freezes are one of the most effective tools against economic ID theft available to consumers. They allow you to lock up your records and select a secret code that only you know and can use to temporarily "thaw" your credit. That added layer of security means that thieves can't do anything with your information even if they are able to obtain it.

Freezes have always been available for free to victims of ID theft. But recently all three of the major credit bureaus adopted new rules allowing more non-victims to have access to them than ever.

This is a big step forward. Before the new rules, only residents in the 39 states (plus Washington D.C.) listed in the columns below were allowed by statute to request a credit freeze. Now everyone else in the other 11 states -- Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, South Carolina, and Virginia -- will be allowed to take this preemptive measure against ID theft. If you live in one of the 11 states, here's what you need to know:

• The cost is $10 per bureau. The total to freeze all three credit reports would be $30.
• It will also cost you $10 per bureau each time you want to unfreeze or "thaw" your records to apply for new credit.
• TransUnion's new freeze policy went into effect Oct. 15, 2007. Experian's policy goes into effect Nov. 1. Equifax has not yet announced a start date.

Full instructions for requesting your credit freeze are available at TransUnion.com, Experian.com and Equifax.com.

Special thanks to our listener Ed who put together a form letter to request a credit freeze from TransUnion.

Please note that non-victims of ID theft who live in one of the following 39 states are still required to pay for a credit freeze. The exact price is determined by state law:


Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Hawaii
Illinois
Indiana
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Mississippi
Minnesota
Montana
Nebraska
 Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Dakota
North Carolina
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Source: ConsumersUnion.org