I had a provider tell me she only uses Preferred411 to verify new clients and will not see someone that is not a part of that system. So I went to their website. I get that security is a real issue and frankly I would like a few assurances too. So I had no problem with the idea and was willing to pay the fee. However, when I got on their site I discovered that they:
1.) Are not in the US
2.) Want to verify who I am through my EMPLOYER.
3.) Want me to provide copies of various forms of ID that, in the wrong hands, will easily lead to identity theft. In fact, the amount of ID they ask you to copy and send to them is the perfect amount to get you subjected to identity theft.
They make the claim that they destroy all of that information as soon as they have verified your ID. OK, I know others have used them without incident. I am sure they, as a business, are sincere. However, as a business they likely employee other people. It would be my luck that the employee who gets my details will be unscrupulous enough to copy it, take it home and rip me off. Then what are you going to do? Complain to a company that isn't even based in the US? Raise a stink that will surely gain the attention of people back in the US that you preferred not know about it? All in all, let the "buyer beware". In this day and age when people can steal your ID with very little information it is unwise to deliberately give someone more than enough information to do so willingly. I would sooner give up the hobby altogether. I'm also a government employee who has had so many background checks run on me due to the nature of my work that my employer would be suspicious of someone else doing checks on me (yes, the identity of someone else running checks on you is recorded) and want to know who they are and why. That is the last thing I need my employer poking around in and they would.
There should be other ways and the only local independent provider on the coast that I ever enjoyed using no longer lives on the coast so she cannot serve as a personal reference. At any rate, I am not dumb enough to use Preferred411. That would be suicide. I can't believe a business in 2015 has the balls to ask someone to willingly surrender that much information and expose themselves to such a potential threat. It's absurd.