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It’s
FACT: New Federal Law
Targets Credit Reports, ID Theft A new federal
law tackles two problems consumers might encounter: fair access
to credit and identity theft.
Enacted last December, the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions
Act (FACT) amends the Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1996, which
established
uniform standards regarding what type of information credit agencies
can include in credit reports. FACT makes those standards permanent;
otherwise, they would have expired Jan. 1. The standards are designed
to ensure consumers’ credit histories are accurate and that
consumers have access to their credit reports.
The new identity theft provisions of the law affect merchants, lenders,
credit reporting agencies and federal regulators. The provisions
have several goals: prevention, apprehension of criminals and protection
of identity theft victims.
The law also gives consumers more control over the types of solicitations
they receive, allowing individuals to refuse solicitations from
certain businesses for a five-year period. Businesses that have
a pre-existing business relationship with customers are not included.
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FACT at
a Glance
Credit Reports
- Consumers are entitled to a free annual credit report from
one of the three major credit-rating agencies.
- Financial institutions must notify consumers if their credit
terms are less favorable because of credit scores.
- Agencies must disclose credit scores for a “fair and
reasonable fee.”
- Medical information may not be used when determining eligibility
for credit.
Identity Theft
- Store receipts will show only the last five digits of a credit
card number.
- Identity theft victims need to make only one phone call to
receive advice, set off a nationwide fraud alert and protect
their
credit standing. This replaces a requirement to call all of their
credit card companies and the three major credit-rating agencies.
- Fraud alerts and military active duty alerts may be placed
on credit files, requiring credit-reporting agencies to ensure
future requests for information are from the customer and not
from a thief.
- Regulators must devise a list of identity theft indicators
and, during compliance examinations, evaluate how financial institutions
use them. Fines will be imposed when institutions disregard indicators.
- Lenders and credit agencies are required to develop methods
to stop identity theft before it causes major damage.
Solicitations
- Consumers may refuse to accept solicitations from certain marketing
firms.
- Businesses that have a pre-existing relationship with consumers
are exempt from requested solicitation bans.
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