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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    2,024

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    I am sure you can dispute the charges (but you do have to follow the bank's procedures). This happened to me. I got the last 2 charges back, but not the first one since more than 6 months had passed. I only noticed the most recent one, but went back over my older statements and saw there were more (someone in dallas was using my san antonio atm card, which was in my posession, to pay their DFW water bills!).

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    In one of the conversations I had with a Visa representative when my credit card number was stolen last summer, I was told that it was possible that the thieves just randomly generated my number. They generate a whole bunch and then try them on tiny items (like a $1 song from iTunes). The numbers that work are then used for bigger purchases.

    I know that's not what happened in my case because they also had my old address, where I received a thank-you-letter for opening an account with some gambling service in the UK a few weeks later. But they did make a $1 iTunes purchase before proceeding to a $50 purchase at a computer store in Luxembourg and then a $500 at a gambling service.

    CIBC Visa was spectacular in dealing with it. The first purchase in a foreign country after the $1 iTunes triggered their alarm system and they immediately called me to see whether I was in Luxembourg or buying things there, which of course I wasn't. The gambling money never made it though authorization, and the other charges were reversed very quickly.

    My new credit card has a chip on it, and I read recently that we are just about to get debit cards with chips. Now if all business can move on to the chip-based authorization, things will improve a great deal!

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Southwest Idaho
    Posts
    518
    ZenS, sorry to hear about your misadventures in foreign finance!

    Add my husband and I to the list of victims of credit and debit card thievery within the last couple months. Same as Grog, it started with the $1 iTunes purchase and then a couple more smaller charges. Thankfully, the fraud department of our card company was on the ball and caught the shenanigans before it got too far out of hand.
    Four wheels move the body, two wheels move the soul.

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  4. #19
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    Either I'm just lazy or just want to reduce possibility of problems, but I don't use debit machines at all.
    I only use ATM directly installed inside the bank building itself. Not the independent companies outside of the major banks.
    I will try to use my bank's ATMs to avoid interbanking charges with competitor bank ATMs. Yes, it's peanuts charges....but my lifestyle makes it easier to plan small withdrawals.

    It is possible..to live like this ...remember we don't have a car, cellphone. And helps me budget very carefully.

    I was stunned a few years ago when my brother-in-law told me he never uses any ATM machine. Not sure about my sister. But they have 2 children (now grown). Now that takes abit of coordination.

    Guess he just didn't trust what the thieves can do in terms of technical gadgets and trickery. He has a PhD in engineering and teaches at a major Canadian university.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 04-29-2009 at 08:08 AM.

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    273
    This particular card is issued by a bank that doesn't even have a branch in the state, let alone in town.

    The only place you can use it as an ATM card is on campus.

    If you use it as a debit card they charge you a fee. If you use it at any other ATM machine besides the 3 on campus they charge you a fee. If you try to write checks on the account they charge you a fee (plus make you buy checks from them).

    I always use it as a charge card because of this, or for the ATM machines on campus.

    In fact usually I go to the ATM and take out the $500 max every day until I've got it all and then put it in my regular credit union account, but the last semester was hell on wheels for me and I never got around to emptying the account out. This was partly due to the fact that the only place I can use an ATM without a fee is on campus, quite some distance from where my classes are.

    This account is a really bad deal for students and the campus authorities ought to be ashamed of themselves for forcing students into using it.
    By charity, goodness, restraint, and self-control men and woman alike can store up a well-hidden treasure -- a treasure which cannot be given to others and which robbers cannot steal. A wise person should do good. That is the treasure that cannot be lost.
    - Khuddhaka Patha

    The word of God comes down to man as rain to soil, and the result is mud, not clear water
    - The Sufi Junayd



  6. #21
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    Quote Originally Posted by ZenSojourner View Post
    I always use it as a charge card because of this, or for the ATM machines on campus.
    Out of curiosity, can you explain how you do this? Do you just tell the cashier how the card should be used? Not being in the USA I am not familiar with ATM cards that can be used as charge cards, but I can see how that would be an interesting system in some regards. Do you need to sign anything when you use it as charge card? Or punch a PIN?

    This account is a really bad deal for students and the campus authorities ought to be ashamed of themselves for forcing students into using it.
    It does sound like quite a dubious deal. I wonder what kind of kickback the university gets from the bank.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    the dry side
    Posts
    4,365
    In the US, atm cards are issued by Visa or Mastercard. In many places you have the option of doing a debit/PIN transaction, or a signature/charge transaction ( still debited out of checking account) This is different than using is as a credit account based card. Some cards are debit only.

  8. #23
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Perpetual Confusion and Indecision
    Posts
    488
    We got hit by something(s) recently. One day DH got a call from the credit card company (State Farm Bank), asking if he'd downloaded one song from Itunes that morning. Apparently someone used our card number, but didn't get the 3-digit code on the back right, so they caught it immediately. They issued us new cards right away. I am really impressed that they were so on the ball, after hearing the horror stories others have to tell.

    Then, a couple of days later, he got a letter from our local bank saying that his debit card may have been compromised (the issue Mr Silver mentioned with that processing center). But not mine. So he got a new debit card. In both cases, it was caught before anyone successfully stole from us. We were lucky.

    Ivona - I'd definitely find a different bank, if I were you. I've never heard of anything like that.

    ZenS - that's awful. Your school is rotten.

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    273
    Well I went through yesterday and filed a dispute for each and every one of these bogus charges. This "bank" makes you file separate reports for every charge, and there are about 30 of these.

    They denied them ALL.

    Sent me an e-mail (for EACH DISPUTED CHARGE, so like 20 or 30 e-mails) with a list of generic questions and told me I had to provide this information and REFILE another dispute for each and every one of these bogus charges. AGAIN.

    These were along the lines of has the card ever been lost and then you found it, was the card in your possession, etc etc, very generic questions that should have been include on the dispute form they make you fill out online to start with. No reason these questions shouldn't have been asked right up front, and in fact I answered them over the phone when I initially called.

    Anyway it took me 2 hours to go through and refile all those disputes. And I'm told I'm going to have to do it again and again and again, so they can be sure I'm telling a consistent story (eg they're trying to catch me in a lie).

    In the meantime, they put me on hold for 48 minutes waiting to talk to a supervisor, then switched me to voicemail, which cut me off because I didn't have a "mailbox #".

    Jeez! At least I caught it before the 60 day window to file a dispute had passed.
    By charity, goodness, restraint, and self-control men and woman alike can store up a well-hidden treasure -- a treasure which cannot be given to others and which robbers cannot steal. A wise person should do good. That is the treasure that cannot be lost.
    - Khuddhaka Patha

    The word of God comes down to man as rain to soil, and the result is mud, not clear water
    - The Sufi Junayd



  10. #25
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    the dry side
    Posts
    4,365
    ZenS - that's awful. Your school is rotten.
    uh YEAH.
    I'd go down to the financial office and get past the front desk people to show them what's going on. I'm sure you'll get the brush off but it is a start. I wonder if what they are doing by limiting your options is somehow illegal? This kind of stuff really pisses me off. There are a lot of nasty, predatory, customer-no-service card companies out there and it sounds like you've got one. Perhaps a call to your state attorney generals office, consumer division, might be in order before you go much farther. LOL, maybe a call to Dave Ramsey, too.

    I've had to deal with these types of companies of behalf of a relative who has some brain damage, and was taken advantage of in a number of ways by cards.

    Schools can be a total pain in the butt. My son's college won't accept VISA for tuition payments, only MC. Why? "that's what the board voted on". Stupid.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    Quote Originally Posted by Irulan View Post
    Schools can be a total pain in the butt. My son's college won't accept VISA for tuition payments, only MC. Why? "that's what the board voted on". Stupid.
    The real reason is that credit card companies take a pretty hefty fee on transactions, and the board was trying to find a few pennies to save. UBC saves $2 million a year by no longer permitting people to use credit cards to pay tuition (since 2008). My bet is that your son's college probably got a very good deal from MasterCard... In current times of severe financial restraints (for universities funded by public monies and by endowment income alike) they are getting aggressive at it! They know it's unlikely that they will lose a student because of that.

    Thanks by the way for the explanation about the charge cards!

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867
    We got scammed again--this time on a Chase Visa. Unusual charges--Chase blocked them all, and we're getting new cards.

    What is up with all this illegal activity in my midst all the sudden? My middle son pays his car payment to the same bank that has his checking account--the bank took his car payment out SIX times on the same day, and when they went to fix it, could only manage to fix 4 of them. Now he can't pay his rent and has utility checks bouncing. What's this about????

    Oh, and he developed shingles from the stress!

    Karen
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    273
    OMG, that's awful! The bank should be responsible for all fees as a result of their mistake. Somebody made a data entry error most likely, but it shouldn't be that much hassle to fix it.

    My son just got a credit card, wanting to develop a credit rating. What happened to the good old days when paying your bills, utilities, and rent was sufficient for a credit rating? Now they make you borrow money before you can borrow money.

    My brother has been on a payment plan as a result of a partial bankruptcy. They haven't credited his house payment properly for 6 months. No one can figure out why, not even the bank apparently. His payment plan is supposed to be up this month but they've not credited any of his last several months payments to his house payment principle, it's all being tagged as "interest" and the bank can't fix it. No wonder our economy is in the shape it's in, the lunatics are running the asylum!
    By charity, goodness, restraint, and self-control men and woman alike can store up a well-hidden treasure -- a treasure which cannot be given to others and which robbers cannot steal. A wise person should do good. That is the treasure that cannot be lost.
    - Khuddhaka Patha

    The word of God comes down to man as rain to soil, and the result is mud, not clear water
    - The Sufi Junayd



 

 

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