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[email protected] December 9th 15 07:33 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:09:06 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:48:36 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 06:53:12 -0600, amdx wrote:

On 12/8/2015 7:23 PM, Alex wrote:
John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 10:13:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 12/8/2015 10:03 AM, True North wrote:

Happened to me last year at this time. Someone was using my debit
card out in the western US.
At that time I was seldom using it except at ATMs but did buy gas on
the edge of town then the local news reported that a number of
similar victims had come to light around the same time. Took just
over a week for the bank to reimburse my $ 400 something dollars.

I've read that the card scanners used at gas pumps, ATM's and other
locations are replaced with some jerk's scanner that looks like it's the
original. His collects all your card info.

A couple weeks before Christmas is *not* a good time for this to happen.

I tried, this morning, to go to my statement at the bank's site to see
if I could
figure out where this may have happened. But, everything and anything
to do with that
card has been removed from my account.

I was really surprised that the bank, Pentagon Federal, would have
caught that
charge. Perhaps their computers are programmed to compare usage times
and realized I
couldn't have used the card here and in California only a couple hours
later.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


Bank of America has declined charges at a local gas station we frequent
often - go figure. On the other hand I have used my card during the
same hour my wife was in another state using her card with the same
number and we were both away from home.

My wife was at a gas station, put her card in, pumped $1 before
noticing the cash price was cheaper. She stopped and bought the rest
with cash. I got a call about the $1 charge,they said thieves sometimes
test a card with a small charge.
Mikek


They do. The last time I had a card used fraudulently, I had left it at Safeway. By
the time I realized I'd left it, it had been used for a $1 charge at a local gas
station. The bank told me the same thing.

The cashier was fired withing the next hour, union or no union.


I left my credit/debit card in the ATM in Driggs Idaho and went off to
Jackson Wy for the day.
When I figured out it was missing I went back to the bank and the
manager had it. They said they were waiting for me before they voided
it. A customer found it and turned it in. If I was on the East coast I
would expect to have it maxed out.


I pulled up at an ATM right as another car was leaving. The ATM was asking if I wanted to make another transaction! I hit no and pulled the card out. It was someone I knew so I took it to them after I made my withdrawal. They were very thankful. :)

[email protected] December 9th 15 07:39 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST), wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.


ditto, but I've never timed it.


You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card reader does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to process the charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must "talk" with the credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In the old days, cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In places with slow telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work offline, processing the charge using the chip alone and then authorizing the charges in bulk at the end of the day."

Interesting.

[email protected] December 9th 15 08:30 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 11:39:49 -0800 (PST), wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.

ditto, but I've never timed it.


You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card reader does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to process the charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must "talk" with the credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In the old days, cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In places with slow telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work offline, processing the charge using the chip alone and then authorizing the charges in bulk at the end of the day."

Interesting.


These are not using "chip and pin" protocol. It is just a chip acting
like the stripe for the most part. They just hope the chip is harder
to counterfeit.,

[email protected] December 9th 15 08:39 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 13:19:17 -0500, wrote:

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.


ditto, but I've never timed it.


You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


I did a few today and it seemed about as fast as the swipe as long as
you get your card in while they are still ringing stuff up and the
clerk is doing their job. I suspect it doesn't actually read the card
until it says "authorizing" tho and it might be writing some
transaction info out there when it was done.
I really miss being on the other side of this interface where I knew
what was going on.

Mr. Luddite December 9th 15 10:08 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On 12/9/2015 2:39 PM, wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.

ditto, but I've never timed it.


You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card reader does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to process the charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must "talk" with the credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In the old days, cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In places with slow telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work offline, processing the charge using the chip alone and then authorizing the charges in bulk at the end of the day."

Interesting.



What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.



Keyser Söze December 9th 15 10:10 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On 12/9/15 5:08 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/9/2015 2:39 PM, wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5,
wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite
wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about
my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my
credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110
purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when
I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a
new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card
twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS
and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the
college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher
cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain
fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip"
embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses
them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more
secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine
rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like
in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove
your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges,
wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's
intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it
reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would
be done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.

ditto, but I've never timed it.

You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card
reader does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to
process the charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must
"talk" with the credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In
the old days, cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In
places with slow telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work
offline, processing the charge using the chip alone and then
authorizing the charges in bulk at the end of the day."

Interesting.



What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.



Cards issued to Luddites do not include PINs. :)

John H.[_5_] December 9th 15 10:14 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 17:08:00 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 12/9/2015 2:39 PM, wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.

ditto, but I've never timed it.

You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card reader does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to process the charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must "talk" with the credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In the old days, cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In places with slow telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work offline, processing the charge using the chip alone and then authorizing the charges in bulk at the end of the day."

Interesting.



What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.


A PIN is necessary for ATMs, but I've not been asked for one any other place.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

[email protected] December 9th 15 11:55 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 17:14:23 -0500, John H.
wrote:


What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.


A PIN is necessary for ATMs, but I've not been asked for one any other place.


It is a chip feature that they are not implementing here yet. In fact
I doubt the chip is really that much of an advancement besides the
fact that anyone with a stripe writer can clone a card.

Bear in mind banks never eat a dime of fraud. It is buried in your
fees and they make a profit based on their gross. They don't care it
is just vig on their business.

We should care.

Chip and pin is supposed to be better, until the crooks figure that
one out. (counterfeit "chip" card with a lot of money on it)



Alex[_6_] December 10th 15 01:06 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


The machine prints out the receipt in the same amount of time. You are
referencing the delay in the time it takes to get your card back. It's
not much different.

Alex[_6_] December 10th 15 01:07 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit longer, then you can remove it.


I haven't had to OK the charges. Might be a different type of machine.

Alex[_6_] December 10th 15 01:12 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:09:06 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:48:36 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 06:53:12 -0600, amdx wrote:

On 12/8/2015 7:23 PM, Alex wrote:
John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 10:13:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 12/8/2015 10:03 AM, True North wrote:

Happened to me last year at this time. Someone was using my debit
card out in the western US.
At that time I was seldom using it except at ATMs but did buy gas on
the edge of town then the local news reported that a number of
similar victims had come to light around the same time. Took just
over a week for the bank to reimburse my $ 400 something dollars.

I've read that the card scanners used at gas pumps, ATM's and other
locations are replaced with some jerk's scanner that looks like it's the
original. His collects all your card info.

A couple weeks before Christmas is *not* a good time for this to happen.

I tried, this morning, to go to my statement at the bank's site to see
if I could
figure out where this may have happened. But, everything and anything
to do with that
card has been removed from my account.

I was really surprised that the bank, Pentagon Federal, would have
caught that
charge. Perhaps their computers are programmed to compare usage times
and realized I
couldn't have used the card here and in California only a couple hours
later.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

Bank of America has declined charges at a local gas station we frequent
often - go figure. On the other hand I have used my card during the
same hour my wife was in another state using her card with the same
number and we were both away from home.
My wife was at a gas station, put her card in, pumped $1 before
noticing the cash price was cheaper. She stopped and bought the rest
with cash. I got a call about the $1 charge,they said thieves sometimes
test a card with a small charge.
Mikek
They do. The last time I had a card used fraudulently, I had left it at Safeway. By
the time I realized I'd left it, it had been used for a $1 charge at a local gas
station. The bank told me the same thing.

The cashier was fired withing the next hour, union or no union.

I left my credit/debit card in the ATM in Driggs Idaho and went off to
Jackson Wy for the day.
When I figured out it was missing I went back to the bank and the
manager had it. They said they were waiting for me before they voided
it. A customer found it and turned it in. If I was on the East coast I
would expect to have it maxed out.

I pulled up at an ATM right as another car was leaving. The ATM was asking if I wanted to make another transaction! I hit no and pulled the card out. It was someone I knew so I took it to them after I made my withdrawal. They were very thankful. :)


The ATM at my local bank makes you take the card out before you can
proceed. They should all be that way.

Califbill December 10th 15 02:01 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/9/2015 2:39 PM, wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's
intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it
reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be
done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.

ditto, but I've never timed it.

You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.


They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card reader
does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to process the
charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must "talk" with the
credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In the old days,
cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In places with slow
telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work offline, processing
the charge using the chip alone and then authorizing the charges in bulk
at the end of the day."

Interesting.



What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.




Chip and pin is what is used outside the USA. Our cards are chip and
signature. Go to A foreign country, and you enter a PIN number and not
sign a receipt.


[email protected] December 10th 15 02:30 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 18:55:34 -0500, wrote:

Bear in mind banks never eat a dime of fraud. It is buried in your
fees and they make a profit based on their gross. They don't care it
is just vig on their business.


===

That's not really true. It cuts into the bottom line of a very cost
sensitive business. All of the banks and card companies have invested
untold millions of dollars in fraud alerting and control systems. It's
a huge operation that is mostly invisible to the general public. The
credit card business is very competetive and fraud not only reduces
profits but also creates reputational risk to the organization as a
whole.

[email protected] December 10th 15 04:59 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:12:29 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:09:06 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:48:36 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 06:53:12 -0600, amdx wrote:

On 12/8/2015 7:23 PM, Alex wrote:
John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 10:13:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 12/8/2015 10:03 AM, True North wrote:

Happened to me last year at this time. Someone was using my debit
card out in the western US.
At that time I was seldom using it except at ATMs but did buy gas on
the edge of town then the local news reported that a number of
similar victims had come to light around the same time. Took just
over a week for the bank to reimburse my $ 400 something dollars.

I've read that the card scanners used at gas pumps, ATM's and other
locations are replaced with some jerk's scanner that looks like it's the
original. His collects all your card info.

A couple weeks before Christmas is *not* a good time for this to happen.

I tried, this morning, to go to my statement at the bank's site to see
if I could
figure out where this may have happened. But, everything and anything
to do with that
card has been removed from my account.

I was really surprised that the bank, Pentagon Federal, would have
caught that
charge. Perhaps their computers are programmed to compare usage times
and realized I
couldn't have used the card here and in California only a couple hours
later.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

Bank of America has declined charges at a local gas station we frequent
often - go figure. On the other hand I have used my card during the
same hour my wife was in another state using her card with the same
number and we were both away from home.
My wife was at a gas station, put her card in, pumped $1 before
noticing the cash price was cheaper. She stopped and bought the rest
with cash. I got a call about the $1 charge,they said thieves sometimes
test a card with a small charge.
Mikek
They do. The last time I had a card used fraudulently, I had left it at Safeway. By
the time I realized I'd left it, it had been used for a $1 charge at a local gas
station. The bank told me the same thing.

The cashier was fired withing the next hour, union or no union.
I left my credit/debit card in the ATM in Driggs Idaho and went off to
Jackson Wy for the day.
When I figured out it was missing I went back to the bank and the
manager had it. They said they were waiting for me before they voided
it. A customer found it and turned it in. If I was on the East coast I
would expect to have it maxed out.

I pulled up at an ATM right as another car was leaving. The ATM was asking if I wanted to make another transaction! I hit no and pulled the card out. It was someone I knew so I took it to them after I made my withdrawal. They were very thankful. :)


The ATM at my local bank makes you take the card out before you can
proceed. They should all be that way.


The original designs were set up that way so they could retain a "bad"
card in the machine. Now they have a lot that you just swipe like a
POS.

[email protected] December 10th 15 05:10 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 21:30:46 -0500,
wrote:

On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 18:55:34 -0500,
wrote:

Bear in mind banks never eat a dime of fraud. It is buried in your
fees and they make a profit based on their gross. They don't care it
is just vig on their business.


===

That's not really true. It cuts into the bottom line of a very cost
sensitive business. All of the banks and card companies have invested
untold millions of dollars in fraud alerting and control systems. It's
a huge operation that is mostly invisible to the general public. The
credit card business is very competetive and fraud not only reduces
profits but also creates reputational risk to the organization as a
whole.


It is still something they budget for and the fees are adjusted to
cover it. I would agree that the bank with the lowest fraud rate might
offer better terms but the high risk banks have the highest rates and
marginal customers still pay them.

Califbill December 10th 15 05:34 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
wrote:
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:12:29 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:09:06 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:48:36 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 06:53:12 -0600, amdx wrote:

On 12/8/2015 7:23 PM, Alex wrote:
John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 10:13:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 12/8/2015 10:03 AM, True North wrote:

Happened to me last year at this time. Someone was using my debit
card out in the western US.
At that time I was seldom using it except at ATMs but did buy gas on
the edge of town then the local news reported that a number of
similar victims had come to light around the same time. Took just
over a week for the bank to reimburse my $ 400 something dollars.

I've read that the card scanners used at gas pumps, ATM's and other
locations are replaced with some jerk's scanner that looks like it's the
original. His collects all your card info.

A couple weeks before Christmas is *not* a good time for this to happen.

I tried, this morning, to go to my statement at the bank's site to see
if I could
figure out where this may have happened. But, everything and anything
to do with that
card has been removed from my account.

I was really surprised that the bank, Pentagon Federal, would have
caught that
charge. Perhaps their computers are programmed to compare usage times
and realized I
couldn't have used the card here and in California only a couple hours
later.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

Bank of America has declined charges at a local gas station we frequent
often - go figure. On the other hand I have used my card during the
same hour my wife was in another state using her card with the same
number and we were both away from home.
My wife was at a gas station, put her card in, pumped $1 before
noticing the cash price was cheaper. She stopped and bought the rest
with cash. I got a call about the $1 charge,they said thieves sometimes
test a card with a small charge.
Mikek
They do. The last time I had a card used fraudulently, I had left it at Safeway. By
the time I realized I'd left it, it had been used for a $1 charge at a local gas
station. The bank told me the same thing.

The cashier was fired withing the next hour, union or no union.
I left my credit/debit card in the ATM in Driggs Idaho and went off to
Jackson Wy for the day.
When I figured out it was missing I went back to the bank and the
manager had it. They said they were waiting for me before they voided
it. A customer found it and turned it in. If I was on the East coast I
would expect to have it maxed out.
I pulled up at an ATM right as another car was leaving. The ATM was
asking if I wanted to make another transaction! I hit no and pulled
the card out. It was someone I knew so I took it to them after I made
my withdrawal. They were very thankful. :)


The ATM at my local bank makes you take the card out before you can
proceed. They should all be that way.


The original designs were set up that way so they could retain a "bad"
card in the machine. Now they have a lot that you just swipe like a
POS.


Best way I saw was in Europe. Card was ejected and you had to remove
before the money was dispensed.


Mr. Luddite December 10th 15 06:58 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On 12/9/2015 9:01 PM, Califbill wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/9/2015 2:39 PM, wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:19:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:49:38 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 09:07:16 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 11:48:09 AM UTC-5, Califbill wrote:
wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 7:28:38 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek


I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure,
but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.


I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

That was my experience. You put it in, wait, OK the charges, wait a bit
longer, then you can remove it.


Overall, is the time much different than a swipe and waiting for the
receipt and signing?

To me it seems a bit longer. The biggest thing is that it's
intolerant of removing your card too soon. I'd think that once it
reads the chip, and that should take less than a second, it would be
done with your card. That's seemingly not the case.

ditto, but I've never timed it.

You would need to use a lot of samples to know much because network
traffic will make a difference on both of them, It gets a lot slower
when a lot of people are shopping ... like now.

They may still do that, but:

"One of the benefits of chip and PIN technology is that the card reader
does not have to be connected to a phone or Internet line to process the
charge. With magnetic stripe cards, the card reader must "talk" with the
credit card company before authorizing the charge. (In the old days,
cashiers would call in the charge over the phone.) In places with slow
telephony networks, chip and PIN terminals can work offline, processing
the charge using the chip alone and then authorizing the charges in bulk
at the end of the day."

Interesting.



What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.




Chip and pin is what is used outside the USA. Our cards are chip and
signature. Go to A foreign country, and you enter a PIN number and not
sign a receipt.


Thanks.

Mr. Luddite December 10th 15 07:01 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On 12/9/2015 6:55 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 17:14:23 -0500, John H.
wrote:


What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.


A PIN is necessary for ATMs, but I've not been asked for one any other place.


It is a chip feature that they are not implementing here yet. In fact
I doubt the chip is really that much of an advancement besides the
fact that anyone with a stripe writer can clone a card.

Bear in mind banks never eat a dime of fraud. It is buried in your
fees and they make a profit based on their gross. They don't care it
is just vig on their business.

We should care.

Chip and pin is supposed to be better, until the crooks figure that
one out. (counterfeit "chip" card with a lot of money on it)



Oh, I think they care otherwise they would not be investing in all the
fraud prevention systems and monitoring software. Despite what you may
believe, we still have a competition based business world.

[email protected] December 10th 15 11:54 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 02:01:17 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 12/9/2015 6:55 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 17:14:23 -0500, John H.
wrote:


What PIN? I've received some new replacement cards with the chip but I
didn't see or read anything about a PIN number being required to use
them. Haven't tried any of them yet, so I guess I'll find out eventually.


A PIN is necessary for ATMs, but I've not been asked for one any other place.


It is a chip feature that they are not implementing here yet. In fact
I doubt the chip is really that much of an advancement besides the
fact that anyone with a stripe writer can clone a card.

Bear in mind banks never eat a dime of fraud. It is buried in your
fees and they make a profit based on their gross. They don't care it
is just vig on their business.

We should care.

Chip and pin is supposed to be better, until the crooks figure that
one out. (counterfeit "chip" card with a lot of money on it)



Oh, I think they care otherwise they would not be investing in all the
fraud prevention systems and monitoring software. Despite what you may
believe, we still have a competition based business world.


I agree they can compete based on a lower fraud rate, thus lower fees
but the bank is still going to recover their expenses.
As we saw in 2009, bad loan decisions represented far more losses than
people scamming credit cards and the tax payer bailed them out.
I am not worried about the banks. I also make a point of keeping a
high enough balance so I don't pay fees

True North[_2_] December 10th 15 12:28 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
Calif sez....

"Best way I saw was in Europe. *Card was ejected and you had to remove
before the money was dispensed."


Not just Europe...that's how our ATMs work here.

John H.[_5_] December 10th 15 12:53 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:06:21 -0500, Alex wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.

Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


The machine prints out the receipt in the same amount of time. You are
referencing the delay in the time it takes to get your card back. It's
not much different.


OK, OK. I stand humbly and soundly corrected. But I do find myself reaching for my
card well before the machine is done with it.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

[email protected] December 10th 15 02:23 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Thursday, December 10, 2015 at 7:53:17 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:06:21 -0500, Alex wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.
Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


The machine prints out the receipt in the same amount of time. You are
referencing the delay in the time it takes to get your card back. It's
not much different.


OK, OK. I stand humbly and soundly corrected. But I do find myself reaching for my
card well before the machine is done with it.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


You're standing in the wrong place. I even commented to the cashier about how slow it was, and they agreed it was slower than swiping. Seeing how many times a day they experience it, I'll take their word for it.

[email protected] December 10th 15 04:17 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 06:23:08 -0800 (PST), wrote:

On Thursday, December 10, 2015 at 7:53:17 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:06:21 -0500, Alex wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.
Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


The machine prints out the receipt in the same amount of time. You are
referencing the delay in the time it takes to get your card back. It's
not much different.


OK, OK. I stand humbly and soundly corrected. But I do find myself reaching for my
card well before the machine is done with it.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


You're standing in the wrong place. I even commented to the cashier about how slow it was, and they agreed it was slower than swiping. Seeing how many times a day they experience it, I'll take their word for it.


I was out shopping yesterday with this question in mind and I think it
is about the same. It is just the perception because you are waiting
to get your card back instead of just waiting for the receipt, that
you usually don't really care about anyway.
Then you have to put your card away.

Califbill December 10th 15 06:12 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
wrote:
On Thursday, December 10, 2015 at 7:53:17 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:06:21 -0500, Alex wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more
secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.
Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


The machine prints out the receipt in the same amount of time. You are
referencing the delay in the time it takes to get your card back. It's
not much different.


OK, OK. I stand humbly and soundly corrected. But I do find myself reaching for my
card well before the machine is done with it.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!


You're standing in the wrong place. I even commented to the cashier
about how slow it was, and they agreed it was slower than swiping.
Seeing how many times a day they experience it, I'll take their word for it.


I think it is the reader, phone connection. Local gas station is having a
bad time since new reader was installed. Reader company says att , att
says reader.


[email protected] December 10th 15 09:06 PM

Credit Card Fraud
 
On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 10:12:29 -0800, Califbill billnews wrote:

I think it is the reader, phone connection. Local gas station is having a
bad time since new reader was installed. Reader company says att , att
says reader.


Too bad I am so far away. I have the tool to break that tie in my shop
;-)

Alex[_6_] December 11th 15 12:56 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
wrote:
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:12:29 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Wednesday, December 9, 2015 at 1:09:06 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 09 Dec 2015 12:48:36 -0500, John H.
wrote:

On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 06:53:12 -0600, amdx wrote:

On 12/8/2015 7:23 PM, Alex wrote:
John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 10:13:06 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 12/8/2015 10:03 AM, True North wrote:

Happened to me last year at this time. Someone was using my debit
card out in the western US.
At that time I was seldom using it except at ATMs but did buy gas on
the edge of town then the local news reported that a number of
similar victims had come to light around the same time. Took just
over a week for the bank to reimburse my $ 400 something dollars.

I've read that the card scanners used at gas pumps, ATM's and other
locations are replaced with some jerk's scanner that looks like it's the
original. His collects all your card info.

A couple weeks before Christmas is *not* a good time for this to happen.

I tried, this morning, to go to my statement at the bank's site to see
if I could
figure out where this may have happened. But, everything and anything
to do with that
card has been removed from my account.

I was really surprised that the bank, Pentagon Federal, would have
caught that
charge. Perhaps their computers are programmed to compare usage times
and realized I
couldn't have used the card here and in California only a couple hours
later.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

Bank of America has declined charges at a local gas station we frequent
often - go figure. On the other hand I have used my card during the
same hour my wife was in another state using her card with the same
number and we were both away from home.
My wife was at a gas station, put her card in, pumped $1 before
noticing the cash price was cheaper. She stopped and bought the rest
with cash. I got a call about the $1 charge,they said thieves sometimes
test a card with a small charge.
Mikek
They do. The last time I had a card used fraudulently, I had left it at Safeway. By
the time I realized I'd left it, it had been used for a $1 charge at a local gas
station. The bank told me the same thing.

The cashier was fired withing the next hour, union or no union.
I left my credit/debit card in the ATM in Driggs Idaho and went off to
Jackson Wy for the day.
When I figured out it was missing I went back to the bank and the
manager had it. They said they were waiting for me before they voided
it. A customer found it and turned it in. If I was on the East coast I
would expect to have it maxed out.
I pulled up at an ATM right as another car was leaving. The ATM was asking if I wanted to make another transaction! I hit no and pulled the card out. It was someone I knew so I took it to them after I made my withdrawal. They were very thankful. :)

The ATM at my local bank makes you take the card out before you can
proceed. They should all be that way.

The original designs were set up that way so they could retain a "bad"
card in the machine. Now they have a lot that you just swipe like a
POS.


The few I use still could take the card - it is pulled into the machine
for a second before it spits it back out. It's Bank of America if it
makes a difference.

Alex[_6_] December 11th 15 01:01 AM

Credit Card Fraud
 
wrote:
On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 06:23:08 -0800 (PST),
wrote:

On Thursday, December 10, 2015 at 7:53:17 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Wed, 9 Dec 2015 20:06:21 -0500, Alex wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Tue, 8 Dec 2015 20:30:06 -0500, Alex wrote:

wrote:
On Tuesday, December 8, 2015 at 11:24:40 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/8/2015 11:03 AM, amdx wrote:
On 12/8/2015 8:20 AM, John H. wrote:
So yesterday evening I get a call from my bank asking about my credit
card usage. Not
trusting the caller, I called the bank. Sure enough, my credit card
information had
been used at a Shell station in California for a $110 purchase. The
actual card was
still in my billfold, so somehow they got the number.

How? I don't know. But the card is cancelled. Right when I'm about to
order Christmas
presents. Pain in the ass. Luckily, the bank will get me a new card in
two days.

So...watch yourself.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

When my daughter was off at college we had fraud on our card twice.
The first time about a Red Roof stay, $100 of stuff at a CVS and a
$200 steak dinner.
The second time, a bunch of around $50 charges of Apple tunes.
Replaced the card both times.
There seemed to be a lot of that happening around the college town,
but the fraudulent charges happened in a different city.

This fraud crap is costing all of us, in the way of higher cost goods.
I hope the new cards they are coming out with help contain fraud.

Mikek

I've been getting replacement cards with the new "chip" embedded in
them. So far though, I have not found any place that uses them yet.
They still swipe the magnetic strip.
I've used my chip at Lowes a couple of times. It may be more secure, but it's slower and a bit of a PITA as compared to just swiping.

I didn't find it to be slower. They slide it in the machine rather than
swiping. Same thing in my experience.
Well just push it in the slot and pull it right back out, like in swiping, and see
who gets yelled at by the cashier!

You gotta wait for the machine to tell you it's OK to remove your card or you'll get
your damn hand slapped.

It takes longer.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

The machine prints out the receipt in the same amount of time. You are
referencing the delay in the time it takes to get your card back. It's
not much different.
OK, OK. I stand humbly and soundly corrected. But I do find myself reaching for my
card well before the machine is done with it.
--

Ban idiots, not guns!

You're standing in the wrong place. I even commented to the cashier about how slow it was, and they agreed it was slower than swiping. Seeing how many times a day they experience it, I'll take their word for it.

I was out shopping yesterday with this question in mind and I think it
is about the same. It is just the perception because you are waiting
to get your card back instead of just waiting for the receipt, that
you usually don't really care about anyway.
Then you have to put your card away.


The machines are also usually slower during the holiday but not as bad
as when they used a dial up connection!


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