Social Security number
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A social security number (SSN) is a nine digit number resembling "123-00-1234" which is issued to an individual by the Social Security Administration of the United States federal government. It is commonly referred to as the SSN.
The British equivalent is a National Insurance number[?], generally called a NI Number.
The Canadian equivalent is a Social Insurance number[?], generally called a SIN Number.
A pamphlet entitled "The Social Security Number" (Pub. No. 05-10633) provides an explanation of the SSN's structure and the method of assigning and validating Social Security numbers.
Other numbers which have been widely used in advertising include:
In order to prevent misuse, the Social Security Administration requests that Social Security cards shown in advertisements only use numbers guaranteed to be unused and invalid. These approved numbers are in the range 987-65-4320 through 987-65-4329.
Table of contents
1 Purpose and use
2 Structure
3 Valid SSNs
4 SSNs Invalidated by Use In Advertising
1 External Links
Purpose and use
The original purpose of this number was to administer the Social Security program. The SSN, however, has also come to be used as a "primary key" (a de facto national ID number) for identifying and tracking individuals within the United States. The U.S. Internal Revenue Service, for example, uses the SSN as the taxpayer identification number (TIN) for tax administration purposes. Each taxpayer and spouse is required to enter his/her own SSN on their federal tax return. Additionally, payroll and benefits, university student records, credit records[?], and driver's licenses are frequently indexed by Social Security number and hence disclosure and processing of these numbers is of major concern to privacy advocates.
Structure
The nine-digit Social Security number is divided into three parts.
Valid SSNs
Any SSN conforming to one of the following criteria is an invalid number:
SSNs Invalidated by Use In Advertising
SSNs used in advertising have rendered those numbers invalid. One infamous instance is that of the E. H. Ferree Company[?] in Lockport, New York[?], which in 1938 decided to promote its product by showing how a Social Security card would fit into its wallets. Over time the number that appeared (078-05-1120 (http://www.ssa.gov/history/ssn/misused.html)) was claimed by over 40,000 people as their own.
002-28-1852, 042-10-3580, 062-36-0749, 078-05-1120, 095-07-3645
128-03-6045, 135-01-6629, 141-18-6941, 165-16-7999, 165-18-7999
165-20-7999, 165-22-7999, 165-24-7999, 189-09-2294, 212-09-7694
212-09-9999, 306-30-2348, 308-12-5070, 468-28-8779, 549-24-1889
External Links