Hackers' favorite targets are the hardest to protect: kids

In the “dark web” hideouts where fraudsters buy, sell and trade pieces of stolen consumer data like currency, there is nothing more valuable than the untouched, untarnished Social Security number of an unsuspecting minor.

That’s because kids, who typically have no credit files to speak of, are basically a blank check to enterprising identity thieves.  

“Children have no credit history, which means you could essentially create a credit history from scratch using their information and run up credit card bills, sign up for other services and then eventually stop making payments and they’d never know it,” says John Ulzheimer, consumer credit expert at Credit Sesame.

For the most part, the usual culprits behind child identity theft aren’t faceless hackers from China or Russia – they’re Mom and Dad. In fact, more than half a million U.S. minors have had their identities stolen by a parent, according to the latest data from ID Analytics. It makes sense. Who else would have easier access to a child’s SSN than the cash-strapped parent who checks them in at all their doctor’s appointments?

The gap in the system

But herein lies another problem — the medical providers themselves. Of the 783 data breaches reported by U.S. companies in 2014 (a record), more than 42% were in the medical and health care industry. That’s bad news for minors. If children’s data are what you’re after, there may be no richer source than health care providers. Not many 12-year-olds have Home Depot or Target credit cards. Plenty of them are listed on their parents’ insurance policies.

The risks that data breaches pose for minors became especially apparent last month with news that nearly 80 million consumers were impacted by a data breach at Anthem, the second-largest health insurer in the U.S. The breach exposed just about every piece of data a hacker would need to slap together a new identity — SSNs, addresses, dates of birth, income levels, you name it.

An Anthem spokesperson could not say how many of the impacted consumers were minors, but it’s almost certain that they numbered in the millions. Michael Bruemmer, vice president of consumer protection at Experian, which is currently managing identity protection services for victims of this week’s Premera data breach, puts the estimate at 25% to 30%. That means as many as 24 million kids might be at risk.

The real issue is that there aren’t strict regulations on how companies protect user information — Anthem, for example, revealed it had not encrypted the user data that was stolen in February’s breach, which would have made it much harder for hackers decode. That could change as data breaches continue to dominate news headlines. As it stands, companies smooth things over with customers by tapping a credit-monitoring service to offer up their services for free for a year or two. Anthem chose All Clear ID, the same company that handled Home Depot’s data breach in 2014.