Colleges Cracking Down on Campus Identity Theft
February 11, 2013
Authorities say that a growing number of college students may be turning to various types of fraud to pay their way through school.
The majority of consumers between the ages of 25 and 44 -- from Millennials and Generation X -- say that homeownership is at least somewhat important to them.
The New Jersey state senate is moving quickly to stop merchants from adding surcharges to the bills of consumers making purchases with credit cards.
Federal authorities recently arrested 13 people across the country who are alleged to have stolen hundreds of millions of dollars through ID theft.
New research suggests that issuing unemployment benefits on prepaid debit cards can actually cause problems for many consumers.
Consumers under the age of 35 have relied on their credit cards in their everyday lives far less than those in older demographics in the last few years.
The total amount of possible mortgage fraud nationwide rose 1.1 percent from July to September 2012 from the previous quarter, according to new data.
According to a recent survey, many people across the nation make resolutions - but they also seem to break them pretty quickly.
A bill was recently introduced in Colorado that would expand an identity theft law to cover not only kids in the state's foster care program, but also those who are in the custody of the state's Divis
Research in Motion, the Canadian company behind the popular BlackBerry line of smartphones, recently had its proposed mobile payments system approved by Visa, and the move could be a big step forward