That might be prudent to do, but at worse it's a few hours of hassle. I searched around and it looks like all you have to do is fill in a form (https://www.ssa.gov/forms/ss-5.pdf) and supply the required documents. At US median wages it's a few hundred dollars, max.
>the potential losses from the selling of this information have any real limit.
Well not really? Suppose someone crashed into your house, making a hole in the wall that allows thieves to steal potentially unlimited amounts of goods from your house. Should the driver be liable for all thefts from your house in perpetuity? Or only between the time of the crash and when you can reasonably get the wall fixed (or in the case of identity theft, changed your SSN)?
>and possibly change name
>I wouldn’t use a compromised IMEI phone for 2FA
Why?
>get new SSN
That might be prudent to do, but at worse it's a few hours of hassle. I searched around and it looks like all you have to do is fill in a form (https://www.ssa.gov/forms/ss-5.pdf) and supply the required documents. At US median wages it's a few hundred dollars, max.
>the potential losses from the selling of this information have any real limit.
Well not really? Suppose someone crashed into your house, making a hole in the wall that allows thieves to steal potentially unlimited amounts of goods from your house. Should the driver be liable for all thefts from your house in perpetuity? Or only between the time of the crash and when you can reasonably get the wall fixed (or in the case of identity theft, changed your SSN)?