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Issue Number:? ??IR-2023-124Inside This IssueIRS, Security Summit announce special summer series as Nationwide Tax Forums begin; tax pros should remain vigilant against identity theft amid continued threats WASHINGTON ? The Internal Revenue Service joins its Security Summit partners today to announce the start of a special summer ?Protect Your Clients; Protect Yourself? campaign aimed at ensuring tax professionals stay alert against new and ongoing threats of tax-related identity theft. The Summit coalition of the IRS, state tax agencies and the nation?s tax community will start the annual summer series next week to raise awareness among tax professionals about the importance of maintaining strong security. The series will run for five consecutive weeks each Tuesday, coinciding with the start of the IRS Nationwide Tax Forums today in New Orleans. The news release series and the summer Tax Forums will provide important information to help protect sensitive taxpayer data that tax professionals hold while also protecting their business from identity thieves. This marks the eighth year that the Security Summit partners have worked to raise awareness about these issues through the "Protect Your Clients; Protect Yourself" campaign. Building stronger connections with tax professionals and increasing collaboration with groups like the Security Summit are part of the transformation effort outlined in the new IRS Strategic Operating Plan. By taking some basic security steps, tax pros can help protect themselves against the relentless efforts of identity thieves. This summer's effort focuses on a reminder for tax pros to focus on fundamentals and to watch out for emerging vulnerabilities. Tax professionals are prime targets of criminal syndicates that are both tech- and tax-savvy. These scammers either trick or hack their way into tax professionals' computer systems to access client data. Even when tax pros think they have client data stored in a secure platform, such as the cloud, lack of strong authentication can make this information vulnerable. Identity thieves use stolen data to file fraudulent tax returns that make it more difficult for the IRS and the states to detect because the fraudulent returns use real financial information. Other data thieves sell the basic tax preparer or taxpayer information on the web so other fraudsters can try filing fraudulent tax returns. The Security Summit formed in 2015 to join the fight against identity theft. The Summit partners have made great inroads against tax-related identity theft, dramatically reducing confirmed identity theft returns and saving billions in tax dollars during the course of the collaborative effort. The summer Security Summit tax pro campaign will cover these key topics that will highlight a series of simple actions that tax professionals can take to better protect their clients and themselves from sensitive data theft. Taking these steps now will help ensure the progress in tax-related identity theft continues.
2023 Nationwide Tax Forums The forums will feature several specific sessions to help educate the tax professional community on security-related topics. Several sessions will be available in Spanish. This year?s forums will also include a special early morning session to help tax pros understand how to prepare a Written Information Security Plan, or WISP. Working together, the Security Summit tax professional working group members created a sample WISP to help their colleagues. Publication 5461-D, Tax professionals should review their security protocols ? Thank you for subscribing to the IRS Newswire, an IRS e-mail service. If you know someone who might want to subscribe to this mailing list, please forward this message to them so they can subscribe. This message was distributed automatically from the mailing list IRS Newswire. Please Do Not Reply To This Message. |
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