Connect with us

Published

on

Most parents would take herculean steps to protect their children. But many overlook a relatively simple way to help shore up a child’s financial security: freezing the minor’s credit. 

This could be especially important in the wake of a major breach in which the Social Security numbers of myriad Americans might be for sale on the dark web. While locking their credit won’t solve all cybersecurity issues related to stolen Social Security numbers, it’s one extra layer of protection parents can implement.

The credit-locking process involves contacting each of the three major credit bureaus — Experian, Equifax and TransUnion — and providing required documentation including the child’s birth certificate, Social Security card, proof of address and parent identification. The bureau then creates a credit report for the child and then locks it, so loans or credit cards can’t be issued using the child’s personal information. The freeze remains in place until the parent, or in some cases, the child, requests that it be lifted, temporarily or permanently.

Parents can take these steps proactively even if there’s nothing to suggest a minor’s credit has been compromised such as unexpected credit card solicitations or bills received in the minor’s name.

It can take some time and effort to lock a child’s credit, but the outlay is minimal compared with what can be a lengthy and emotional credit restoration process. “As an adult, if our credit is stolen, it makes us angry, but we do what needs to be done and we move forward,” said Kim Cole, community engagement manager at Navicore Solutions, nonprofit credit and housing counseling agency. But for children, the emotional impact is much greater, she said. “It can take years to get wind of a problem, and meanwhile the damage can continue to grow.”

Identity theft against children — especially very young ones — often slips under the radar until they are older teens or young adults applying for their first credit card, trying to finance a car or seeking student loans, said Loretta Roney, president and chief executive of InCharge Debt Solutions, a nonprofit provider of credit counseling and other services.

Yet, identity theft for children under age 19 is a growing issue, with this demographic accounting for 3% of all identity theft reports for the first half of 2024, according to Federal Trade Commission data. By comparison, this demographic accounted for 2% of identity fraud reports each year between 2021 and 2023. 

Thieves might use a child’s Social Security number, name and address, or date of birth to do things like apply for government benefits, like health care coverage or nutrition assistance, open a bank or credit card account, apply for a loan, sign up for a utility service or rent a place to live, according to the FTC. Locking a child’s credit won’t protect against all of these, but it’s a solid step in the right direction, financial professionals said.

It’s not just strangers committing fraud against children. Cole offers the example of a friend whose uncle had destroyed his credit and started using his niece’s name and Social Security number to open credit cards and max them out. He had the bills sent to his house, and the young woman only discovered the fraud about four years later, when she went to buy a small fixer-upper and realized she had nearly $50,000 of debt in her name and a credit score in the low 500s.  

The niece filed a police report, a complaint with the FTC and disputed the items with the credit bureaus, but it took time to resolve. She applied for a secured credit card in the interim, since her score was too low to qualify for a traditional card, and the situation pushed back her home-buying by a few years, ultimately costing her more, Cole said.

Check to see if the child has a credit report 

Before locking a child’s credit, it’s good practice to check with each of the three major credit bureaus to see if a report exists. Generally, this will only be the case if someone has fraudulently taken out credit in the minor’s name, or if the child has been named an authorized user on an adult’s credit card. 

To check to see if their child has a credit report, parents can mail a letter with their request to each of the credit bureaus. They should be sure to include a copy of the child’s birth certificate, Social Security card or document from the Social Security Administration showing this number and a copy of the parent’s driver’s license or government-issued identification, with current address. Legal guardians may have to give the credit bureaus a copy of documents authenticating their status.

If something amiss pops up on the report, contact the companies where the fraud occurred as well as the three major credit bureaus. Also report the child identity theft to the FTC, including as many details as possible.

If the report comes back clean, the next step is to actually lock the child’s credit.

If needed, freeze a child’s credit

The process for initiating a credit freeze varies slightly depending on the credit bureau and the age of the minor child. Be sure to follow the precise instructions for each credit bureau. For Equifax, in addition to required documentation, parents need to fill out a form online and submit it via postal mail; minors who are 16 or 17 may request their own security freeze by phone or by mail. The websites for Experian and TransUnion provide further details on their respective processes, which includes document requirements and mailing addresses. It can take a few weeks for the bureaus to process these requests. 

Keep good records for unlocking later in life

Parents need to keep safe the pin number they are provided when locking their child’s credit so it can be temporarily unlocked as needed, such as when the child turns 18 and wants to apply for a credit card, said Bruce McClary, senior vice president of membership and media relations at the nonprofit ​​​​​​​National Foundation for Credit Counseling.

The unlocking process isn’t necessarily seamless and can take time. Equifax, for instance, asks for these requests in writing, with required documentation for identity verification purposes. After age 18, Equifax allows for managing the security freeze online.

Educate children early on protection of personal information

Parents should talk to their children about best practices with respect to sharing personal information, McClary said. For instance, they should caution children to be careful about the kinds of information they provide to websites and apps and to keep their Social Security number close to the vest.

Parents may also want to consider credit or identity threat monitoring services or both. Certain providers may offer basic services for free, but family plans that include adults and children and offer a combination of credit and identity theft protection tend to be fee-based. These services — which can run around $24 or more per month — may offer more comprehensive protection, including identity theft insurance and fraud resolution services. Parents should weigh the options carefully to understand the choices and associated costs.

Continue Reading

Technology

Baidu plans to expand its robotaxis to Europe with Lyft deal

Published

on

By

Baidu plans to expand its robotaxis to Europe with Lyft deal

Cheng Xin | Getty Images

Baidu will bring its driverless taxis to Europe next year via a partnership with U.S. ridehailing firm Lyft, as the Chinese tech giant looks to expand its autonomous vehicles globally.

The robotaxis will initially be deployed in the U.K. and Germany from 2026 with the aim to have “thousands” of vehicles across Europe in the “following years,” the two companies said.

Lyft has had very little presence in Europe until last week when it closed the acquisition of Germany-based ride hailing company FreeNow, which is available in over 150 cities across nine countries, including Ireland, the U.K., Germany and France.

Deployment of the autonomous cars is “pending regulatory approval,” Lyft and Baidu said in a Monday statement. It’s unclear if Lyft will offer Baidu’s robotaxis via the FreeNow app or another product.

The partnership marks a continued push from Baidu to expand its robotaxis to international markets.

Last month, Baidu partnered with Uber to deploy its autonomous cars on the ride-hailing giant’s platform outside the U.S. and mainland China, with a focus on the Middle East and Asia, which will launch later this year. The partnership also covers Europe, though a launch date for the region has not yet been disclosed.

In China, Baidu has been operating its own robotaxi service since 2021 in major cities like Beijing, allowing users to hail an Apollo Go car through the app. Meanwhile, for Lyft, the deal could boost the firm’s presence in the region as it looks to take on rivals like Uber and Bolt.

Autonomous vehicles have become a big focus for ride-hailing companies which have looked to partner with companies that are developing the technology for driverless cars.

In the U.K., a market that Lyft is targeting, Uber this year partnered with self-driving car technology firm Wayve to launch trials of fully autonomous rides starting in spring 2026.

Continue Reading

Technology

Tesla awards Musk $29 billion in shares with prior pay package in limbo

Published

on

By

Tesla awards Musk  billion in shares with prior pay package in limbo

Tesla approves 96 million-share award to CEO Elon Musk

Tesla CEO Elon Musk was awarded an interim pay package of 96 million shares of the company over the weekend. The shares would be worth about $29 billion.

Tesla stock climbed about 2% Monday.

The company said in a filing Sunday that the pay package would vest in two years as long as Musk continued as CEO or in another key executive position.

The new award would be forfeited if the legal battle over his 2018 compensation ends with Musk being able to exercise the larger pay package, which was valued at $56 billion.

In January, Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick upheld a prior ruling in the case, Tornetta v. Musk, that the compensation plan was improperly granted. Tesla shareholders approved the pay package in June 2024.

The case is now before the Delaware Supreme Court.

Musk’s 2018 pay package included a set of performance targets for the company, which were all achieved.

The judge called it “the largest potential compensation opportunity ever observed in public markets” in her January decision and said it was 33 times higher than the nearest comparison, which was Musk’s prior compensation package.

Elon Musk: We'll have hundreds of thousands of full self-driving Teslas by the end of next year

Continue Reading

Technology

Legal AI startup Harvey hits $100 million in annual recurring revenue

Published

on

By

Legal AI startup Harvey hits 0 million in annual recurring revenue

Harvey co-founders Winston Weinberg and Gabe Pereyra

Courtesy of Harvey

Artificial intelligence startup Harvey on Monday announced it has reached $100 million in annual recurring revenue, or ARR, just three years after its launch. 

Harvey runs an AI-powered legal platform for lawyers at law firms and large corporations. Its technology can help with legal research, drafting and diligence projects, and the company is also building industry-specific use cases. 

Winston Weinberg, co-founder and CEO of Harvey, said the startup’s ARR milestone has largely been driven by usage. Harvey has surpassed 500 customers, including CNBC’s parent company, Comcast, and its weekly average users have quadrupled over the past year, the startup said. 

“Most of our accounts grow pretty massively,” Weinberg told CNBC. “You’ll sell to a Comcast or to a law firm, and they’ll buy a couple hundred seats, and then they expand that usage pretty quickly.” 

Weinberg is a former lawyer, and he co-founded Harvey with his friend and roommate Gabe Pereyra, a former research scientist at Google DeepMind and Meta. The pair launched the company in 2022 after experimenting with OpenAI’s large language model GPT-3, which came out before its viral AI chatbot, ChatGPT. 

Read more CNBC tech news

The company’s name, Harvey, is partially inspired by one of the main characters in “Suits,” a legal drama TV series, Weinberg said.

Harvey has raised more than $800 million from investors, according to PitchBook, including Kleiner Perkins, Sequoia Capital and the OpenAI Startup Fund. The company also earned a spot on the 2025 CNBC Disruptor 50 list. 

“With gen AI, and how fast everything’s moving, you just have to learn how to scale really, really fast,” Weinberg said. “I’d say, like every six months I go through a new scaling experience.”

In the months ahead, Weinberg said Harvey is focused on its global expansion and continuing to build out its team. The startup recently hired Siva Gurumurthy, the former director of engineering at Twitter, as its chief technology officer, and John Haddock, who spent a decade at Stripe, as its chief business officer. 

Weinberg said he has learned to appreciate the value of a strong team, especially during periods of rapid growth. 

“We’re starting to get to the point where we have really good leadership in place,” Weinberg said. “That just changes your ability to scale to such a massive degree.”

Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal, which owns CNBC.

Continue Reading

Trending