![]() |
Opps. I Social Engineered the IRS. Lets Post Some Tax Data!
Or: How I Got the IRS to Fax Me My Life With a Phone Call.
How easy is it to get the IRS to fax you someone's life with a simple phone call? Very easy. I even posted the proof. Name, Address, DOB and SSN. Oh yeah, and a fax machine and telephone. Thats all you need and the IRS will be happy to fax you (or anyone else who calls in pretending to be you) your life history by year. http://planetquo.net/Paranoid/Welcom...ld%20Order.JPG |
bashers will step inside now .. 3... 2... 1...
|
Quote:
|
for some reason i'm not surprised
|
Sig spot #4
|
You're a dipshit. If you had called a government agency requesting information they had about you and they refused to give it to you you'd be raising hell about that.
|
Are you the actual owner of the linked website, as in are you "kieth"?
|
So your great anti-government coup was to get them to send you your OWN information? I'm guessing that is probably because you know the answers to their security questions.
|
Quote:
This actually makes me damn glad of using a EIN, and business info when signing up to the vast multitude of home based accounting affiliate programs. |
Why do you insist on keep on posting here? Nobody, as in truly nobody likes you. Youre an idiot.
|
Quote:
On the address part, it was almost laughable. I gave her my current address and she said "I show something different". I said "You have my old Ohio address then, is it street or PO Box?" and she is like "What is the PO Box number?". I honestly wasn't sure which they had last as that would be the "current" address... but she gave it up way too fucking easily. Because if I was not me on the phone, and I was sitting there with a list of someone's info and I had five possible addresses, narrowing it down to a PO Box is pretty damn helpful. Too helpful. Now think about it. When you go to order a credit report on yourself, what are the security questions? Who you worked for, who you have had loans with, where you went to school, who your student loan lender was, etc... all stuff that the IRS gets and puts on those nice little transcripts. Once you get that, you've got everything you need to do real damage. |
Funny how you are crying about others again and their stupidities but you posting 300 passwords is just fine and "did no harm". Stupid fuck.
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
YOU know it's bs, we ALL know it's bs, why do you keep saying it? Its like you keep on saying the grass is blue while everyone knows better, including you. It makes you a dumb fucking retard. |
Quote:
http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/teams..._1280x1024.jpg |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Happy? |
so... genius. can you tell us real quick, how many federal laws one would be breaking by posing as someone else to get all their private information from the government and how many laws you would be breaking by possessing it and distributing it?
just curious. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
hey look! some incredibly stupid people did exactly what you are bragging about doing and are going to prison for a very long time.
good luck dipshit. courtesy of MSNBC.com Thanks to last year?s scandal at Hewlett-Packard, consumers learned how easily private investigators can trick companies into divulging personal information. Now, thanks to a new federal indictment full of data theft allegations, we know they also can trick the IRS and the Social Security Administration into handing over information. Ten suspects were indicted last week in Seattle for allegedly impersonating consumers and obtaining their bank records, tax returns and Social Security earnings statements. According to the indictment, the Internal Revenue Service and the Social Security Administration were repeatedly tricked into coughing up very sensitive documents. In one case, the IRS gave a defendant nearly 10 years worth of tax records, the indictment alleges. In another, a suspect allegedly obtained tax records by claiming his accountant had recently been fired for embezzlement and the information was needed for verification purposes. In all, 12,000 consumers were victimized by the defendants from 2004-2007, the indictment alleges. |
Quote:
|
I think we may go to page 2 here :)
|
wow dude... weird stuff
|
| All times are GMT -7. The time now is 01:10 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123