Acoustic71
Well-Known Member
One must always chose the path that they are comfortable with using.I was going to use PLAID, and when I got to the window where they were asking for my Bank credentials, I stopped DEAD in my tracks. I then went off to do research on PLAID and it is not ideal because of how they are handling those credentials.
Having said that, I am about as anal as they come about protecting my accounts. That did not stop me from being hacked a few times anyway.
My favorite was when I was still a financial advisor. I was sitting in my office on a Saturday, making sure everything was taken care of before I flew out the next morning to a conference. The phone rang. It was Citibank asking to verify my purchase of 8, 22" rims and tires from a custom shop in New Jersey. I assured the lady that I was in Lake Oswego, OR and not New Jersey. She then asked if I had also racked up $400+ at a New Jersey Burger King! Apparently somebody took their whole "crew" out for a meal. I finally took a selfie with my phone showing me in my office before they accepted that I wasn't buying stuff in Jersey.
It took some time, but I did figure out what had happened. Two weeks earlier I had stopped at a Shell station in Roseburg, OR. They claimed they couldn't use my Shell card which should have stopped me in my tracks. They then asked for a more "mainstream" credit card. when I gave it to them, they said they had to "take it inside" as their card scanner weren't working. Second red flag. They obviously used a card scanner on my card while out of my site, then sold the info to whomever was buying stuff in New Jersey. Lesson learned. YMMV.
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