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Technology and online security see continuous enhancements each year, but unfortunately, not those upgrades have not been enough to protect databases from being breached by hackers. As a result, identity theft remains a serious issue in the United States. How serious? According to the Identity Theft Resource Center, more than 166 million records were exposed to identity theft in 2022, arising from over 1,291 total data breaches.
The data breach analysis reports 474 compromises for Q3 2022. The financial services sector accounted for 15 percent of data breaches, healthcare and hospitality were 21.4 percent, the government had 4 percent and education with 5 percent.
In most cases, a company will notify you via email or postal mail after discovering a data breach. They will likely tell you the stolen information, such as your name, email address, username, password, mailing address, Social Security number, and financial account numbers.
Another way you may discover your data was in a breach is if you notice fraudulent activity on your accounts. For example, you may see a credit or debit card charge you did not make, or you may get a phone call or piece of mail about an account you did not open. The thief may have obtained your information through a data breach where the company has failed to notify you or where the breach has gone unnoticed.