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Be careful, with your debit card
Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 21 Dec 2014 01:46:28 -0500, Someone Else wrote: Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 21:25:47 -0500, Someone Else wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: On 12/18/2014 4:43 PM, Tim wrote: My wife is ditching her debit card. It's been "compromised " three times this year. She has several automatic payments coming out of her account monthly, and has to contact her accounts and switch stuff over and has had to do this several times. I won't have a debit card. Banks heavily push their debit cards, credit cards, on-line banking and auto deposit/payments systems. I think they should be 100 percent responsible for any screw-ups or hacks of their software security that results in theft of funds or identity. I've had a few instances of fraud with my personal and company cards over the years and they never charged me a dime. Bank of America, Chase, and CitiBank - all the same. It has been annoying to be declined in Las Vegas, for example, for a $40 purchase. I had to call the bank and verify it. They said I didn't tell them I was leaving town so I told them I didn't think they needed my itinerary and they could see I travel often. That was the first and last time that happened with any credit card. They have some odd procedures for determining what might be fraud. SE === It's always annoying to get declined. It happens to us all the time when we cruise to the Caribbean even though we give them plenty of advanced notice what are plans are, and frequently purchase thousands of dollars worth of diesel fuel. Diesel is not usually the problem, more often a relatively minor purchase in a store. We just switch to another card for a few days and make the obligatory phone calls to get it straightened out. The banks's fraud control systems are programmed to recognize certain patterns of usage which have been associated with problems in the past and it's not always obvious just what triggered the alert. I can't blame them for looking out for fraud but I've had some strange situations where I would charge $2000 one day at a store and get the security decline the next day for $20 in the same county. Their computers must be programmed to flag fraud but I can't figure out the methodology behind it. === They really don't want you to figure out the methodology either. My guess, and it's only that, is that there is some sort of weighted risk analysis score that trips a threshold. I'm sure that the merchant itself is part of the risk equation since some are not only sloppy but actually have collusion by employees. Another factor is your buying history for a given type of merchandise. That's probably true and quite the programming feat! I have a friend who works for Experian who deals with consumer interest based on their credit scores and demographics so other companies can target their advertising effectively. Similar, but simpler, I guess. |
Be careful, with your debit card
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