You don't even have to be that old to remember this time.
I went to a well-known university and they used SSNs as student ID number until roughly 2001-2002. The first half of my university career, my SSN wound up on every Scantron sheet, exam blue book, and term paper I handed in. It was printed on the front of my ID, and even after they recalled old IDs and replaced them with non-SSN cards, the magstripe track data still had your SSN on it because some old dining hall POS system or something like that hadn't been converted.
It was like fish in a barrel for fraudsters, just root around in the trash after finals week and grab people's term papers. I had quite a few friends who discovered that during the time they were attending college, someone had opened a cell phone (or a credit card, in one person's case) in their name.
This was before the days of the free annual credit report law. So these folks never pulled their own files, and only discovered the fraud years after graduation, when they went to apply for a car or home loan and got denied.
I went to a well-known university and they used SSNs as student ID number until roughly 2001-2002. The first half of my university career, my SSN wound up on every Scantron sheet, exam blue book, and term paper I handed in. It was printed on the front of my ID, and even after they recalled old IDs and replaced them with non-SSN cards, the magstripe track data still had your SSN on it because some old dining hall POS system or something like that hadn't been converted.
It was like fish in a barrel for fraudsters, just root around in the trash after finals week and grab people's term papers. I had quite a few friends who discovered that during the time they were attending college, someone had opened a cell phone (or a credit card, in one person's case) in their name.
This was before the days of the free annual credit report law. So these folks never pulled their own files, and only discovered the fraud years after graduation, when they went to apply for a car or home loan and got denied.