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Fraudulent credit-card transactions totalled almost $3m in Atlantic Canada last year
A company in Hong Kong contacted Currie, owner of Bedford-based Plastic Graphics Cards, after locating his company on the Internet. He was asked to make security swipe cards for truckers in Asia. But, as details for the project slowly changed, Currie became suspicious and called the company to do a little investigating.
That's when the man on the other line dropped the bomb.
The cards were going to be used to commit fraud. "Do you have a problem with that?" the caller asked.
In total, major Canadian card companies lost $201 million in 2005 to credit-card fraud, according to the Canadian Bankers Association.
Experian, a credit reference agency, commissioned a waste analysis company to examine the contents of 400 domestic bins in Nottingham to show how easy it was for fraudsters to obtain personal information from household rubbish.
They found:
* 72% of bins contained the full name and full address of at least one member of a household
* Two in five contained a whole credit or debit card number that could be linked to an individual
* 80% of these had an associated expiry date
* One in five bins contained a bank account number and sort code that could be related to an individual's name and address
* One bin even contained a signed blank cheque
* Only 8% of households throwing away full card numbers made an attempt to destroy the documents
* Only 14% contained nothing of interest to fraudsters
Out of 71 local authorities in the UK, interviewed by Experian, 80% said that bin raiding was a growing problem.
source