You could also open phone lines with fake information, ISP accounts and so on.
A good investigator with expensive access will still be able to track you down, but automatically exploiting your data will be much more difficult if it's a mess.
I'm not a lawyer, but if you're applying for a line of credit with false information, I'm pretty sure that's a crime.
If you're not applying for a line of credit, I don't think credit bureaus such as Equifax or "Transperian" (which I assume is a portmanteau of TransUnion and Experian) will base anything on that data, since it's so obviously easy to manipulate.
I'm definitely not a lawyer, but unless your intent is to defraud I wouldn't be so sure about that. I also don't see how you'd ever end up getting prosecuted for this unless you really piss someone off, in which case I guess you could get prosecuted for just about anything.
In any case, whether or not this is legal seems utterly irrelevant.
>If you're not applying for a line of credit, I don't think credit bureaus such as Equifax or "Transperian" (which I assume is a portmanteau of TransUnion and Experian) will base anything on that data, since it's so obviously easy to manipulate.
You would be wrong. That'd be an awful way to maintain up-to-date address data on people.
Besides, the first company named was "Lexis-Nexis".