ID Theft, Solar Contractors, Disclosing Defects FAQ Washington DC

When you have questions needing answers that really hit home, contact the Deadline Newsroom. This installment: ID-theft/credit monitoring; solar contractors; disclosing defects. Unauthorized use of this story is a copyright violation -- a federal crime.Deadline Newsroom - Q: I'm concerned about identity theft. Should I buy a credit monitoring.

Local Companies

Consumer Credit Counseling
(202) 291-7767
Washington, DC
Operational Hope Inc
(202) 582-2212
2509 Good Hope Rd SE
Washington, DC
Debt Aids Trade Africia
(202) 464-1440
1400 I St NW
Washington, DC
Credit & Debt Counseling Service
(202) 347-3800
Washington, DC
Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Washington Inc
(202) 682-1500
1275 K St NW Ste 885
Washington, DC
Consumer Credit Counseling
(202) 637-4851
Washington, DC
Jvj Business Enterprises
(202) 543-2453
1511 Pennsylvania Ave SE
Washington, DC
Debt Advisory International
(202) 463-2188
1747 Pennsylvania Ave NW Ste 450
Washington, DC

provided by:http://www.deadlinenews.com/

When you have questions needing answers that really hit home, contact the Deadline Newsroom. This installment: ID-theft/credit monitoring; solar contractors; disclosing defects.

by Broderick Perkins
© 2008 DeadlineNews.Com




Deadline Newsroom - Q: I'm concerned about identity theft. Should I buy a credit monitoring service?

A: Only if you are too busy to take no-cost steps to do it yourself. Everyone should be concerned about identity theft, which happens when someone pilfers your personal information to masquerade as you to make purchases, withdraw cash or open accounts in your name.

Credit monitoring services help you quickly spot evidence of ID-theft by keeping tabs on your credit report for suspicious activity. The services charge you $50 to $100 a year, but Consumer Reports calls the services "overrated, oversold, and overpriced."

That's because federal law allows you to do-it-yourself by getting your credit report from each major credit reporting agency -- Equifax, Experian and TransUnion -- every year. That means, if you spread out the freebie access and obtain one report from a different agency every four months, you've effectively set up your own credit monitoring service. The federally sanctioned freebie is at AnnualCreditReport.com. Avoid similar-sounding Web sites. ...

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