I’m consistently impressed with the stupidity of certain financial institutions. Take credit card companies and the issuing banks. We’re in the middle of a financial meltdown driven by failures in the credit system and easy credit, yet you still can’t check out at Target (or nearly anyplace else) without the annoying offer for your 10% discount if you just apply for a card on the spot.
I also hate the “checks” they are always mailing me to transfer balances or otherwise use a credit for something I might use cash for. Any fraudster getting his or her hands on them can have a field day.
That’s why I’m highly amused by the latest offer to my wife. The envelope arrived with her name and address on the outside, and some else’s pre-printed checks on the inside.
I guess the sorting machine ended up, and hopefully her checks went to someone trustworthy.
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5 Replies to “Credit Card (Paper) Security Fail”
You can call your CC company and tell them to quit sending you those so-called “convenience” checks. Convenient for whom? Any petty thief who finds them, I suppose. Anyway, I don’‘t get them anymore.
They are taking advantage of the crappy economy to try and induce more people to go further into debt. Combine that with the tougher bankruptcy laws they bought from Congress a couple of years ago and the banks & credit card companies are tossing out bait to determine who will be their serfs for the next 20 years.
No-one should be at all surprised about these. The banks are in ruin and want people with *good* credit to get *more* credit because it’s about the only way they can make money right now. Those of us with good credit and low-to-zero debt are the best targets for these “offers” – we have much more to lose that is at stake.
I didn’‘t really appreciate how bad it’s got until a friend forwarded me this.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1127278/Revealed-Day-banks-just-hours-collapse.html
Ok, so being from the UK I know how sensational the daily mail can be, but it’s quite sobering
You can sense the desperation in a number of industries. I’‘ve had 3 unsolicited letters from real estate agents saying “now is the time to *get off the fence* and *own*”. Their emphasis, and I’‘ve not set foot in an agents office and have no intentions to for at least 12-18 months.
Cheers,
Mike.
Every time I go to the grocery store I get singled out for a platinum card, but am told by the store that this is not for every customer, so it looks like real time marketing. Southwest Airlines has a card you PAY for, but get ‘‘free’’ airline credits. Oh, after the introductory rate, it jumps to 31%. Wow, what a bargain! Today I got a line of credit from a bank, a huge amount of money offered at mediocre interest rate, but get this, it jumps to 27.99 percent if I violate any one of any 128 conditions, plus 12 different ways I can incur fees! So basically they want to lend people money who do not need it and then try to screw them over. People who need money need not apply. What a great business model. It’s the banking version of spam, because they only a few suckers to make lots of money. They used to be trusted institutions, but now they are sleazy street corner loan sharks. Who’s running the show?
-Adrian
I tweeted about the Target thing some time last year – it’s like the lending industry is saying “Double or nothing?”