hitchinaride wrote:Welcome to the Trump ERROR boys and girls.
What does this have to do with Trump? Also, that is insider trading, and we all know the only ones allowed to do insider trading are members of Congress.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
hitchinaride wrote:Welcome to the Trump ERROR boys and girls.



https://finance.yahoo.com/news/new-webs ... 30288.htmlThe entrepreneur behind DoNotPay, a free online chatbot that has successfully fought around 375,000 parking tickets in New York, Seattle, and the U.K., is launching a new service on Tuesday that will allow people to sue Equifax for $15,000 in mere minutes.
On September 7, Equifax revealed a massive cybersecurity breach that potentially exposed the Social Security numbers and other personal information of 143 million people. The breach has spurred two dozen lawsuits in federal court involving lawyers who want to represent many plaintiffs. But it tends to be tough for individuals to sue companies like Equifax on their own.
“Three days ago I realized I should definitely be doing something for this,” Joshua Browder, DoNotPay’s creator, told Yahoo Finance. “I was doing research and I found no one is going down to small claims court on the state level.”
Despite the pending federal lawsuits, Browder sees small claims court as the ideal way to deal with this, without involving costly lawyers or complex cases that could last years.
“I think people should be empowered to do it themselves,” Browder said. “Instead of taking Equifax to federal court, they could take Equifax to small claims. In a lot of these states you’re not allowed lawyers, there are no legal fees, and state judges are more sympathetic and more fair. They don’t take kindly to big corporations pushing people around.”
Class action cases generally won’t affect a consumer’s right to take a corporation to small claims court, provided the company does business in that state. However, you may have to opt-out of a class action to be eligible, something for which DoNotPay might have to write another bot.
“The consumer can definitely go forward in small claims court, even if a class action is pending,” said F. Paul Bland, an attorney and executive director for Public Justice. “There’s no chance a class action would bar a consumer from bringing such a case.”
It prevents someone from opening new accounts but if they have your Credit Card number, they can still make charges.CAA Flagship wrote:What does a "freeze" do? Sounds like it will only prevent them from passing on requested information. Will it erase your information?

http://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/0 ... act-243419IRS awards multimillion-dollar fraud-prevention contract to Equifax
The no-bid contract was issued last week, as the company continued facing fallout from its massive security breach.
The IRS will pay Equifax $7.25 million to verify taxpayer identities and help prevent fraud under a no-bid contract issued last week, even as lawmakers lash the embattled company about a massive security breach that exposed personal information of as many as 145.5 million Americans.

things like this will always be blamed on the president or the incumbent partyCol Hogan wrote:Our government is so f’ed up...
http://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/0 ... act-243419IRS awards multimillion-dollar fraud-prevention contract to Equifax
The no-bid contract was issued last week, as the company continued facing fallout from its massive security breach.
The IRS will pay Equifax $7.25 million to verify taxpayer identities and help prevent fraud under a no-bid contract issued last week, even as lawmakers lash the embattled company about a massive security breach that exposed personal information of as many as 145.5 million Americans.![]()
![]()

Thank goodness we drained the swamp...CID1990 wrote:things like this will always be blamed on the president or the incumbent partyCol Hogan wrote:Our government is so f’ed up...
http://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/0 ... act-243419
![]()
![]()
but it is the Federal procurement system that causes this - a system so Byzantine and complicated (in the name of fairness of course!) that I have zero faith it will ever be fixed

Nailed it.Chizzang wrote:Thank goodness we drained the swamp...CID1990 wrote:
things like this will always be blamed on the president or the incumbent party
but it is the Federal procurement system that causes this - a system so Byzantine and complicated (in the name of fairness of course!) that I have zero faith it will ever be fixed
Oh, and if you wanna know how contracts are "procured"
just follow the money

93henfan wrote:I agree. Hang 'em high.
143 million has to be 75%+ of all US citizens with credit information on file. The more interesting number would be to see how many people were not breached.

Meh. I get way too many rewards for using a credit card and who wants to carry that much cash?houndawg wrote:![]()
Pay cash for everything, boys. Even if you have to pawn the spare tire.


89Hen wrote:Meh. I get way too many rewards for using a credit card and who wants to carry that much cash?houndawg wrote:![]()
Pay cash for everything, boys. Even if you have to pawn the spare tire.

Quality reply there dawg. BTW, just booked two more flights on Cap One's dime.houndawg wrote:89Hen wrote: Meh. I get way too many rewards for using a credit card and who wants to carry that much cash?


aviation safety ain't what it used to be.89Hen wrote:Quality reply there dawg. BTW, just booked two more flights on Cap One's dime.houndawg wrote:

hitchinaride wrote:Welcome to the Trump ERROR boys and girls.

Pretty sure back in the day, before the days of credit scores on the interwebs, people could buy vehicles the same day...they certainly didn't wait around for a couple of weeks for every credit score to come in.Skjellyfetti wrote:So other businesses can pay them money to give them your credit information... as close to instantaneous as possible. If you're sitting at the car dealership ready to buy a car... pending credit check... the salesperson is going to be pissed if he can't work out your financing pretty **** fast. "Sorry, come back next week when we get your credit score back" would be death for car salesmen.Pwns wrote:Why do the computers that have all this stuff on it have to be physically connected to the rest of the world?
It's how their business model works. Yeah, credit agencies could keep it on paper files like in the olden days of yore.... but, their clients aren't going to want to wait around for a couple of weeks for every credit score to come in. They want it NOW! Even keeping all the day on air gapped computers will still slow your business down and no one would use you in favor of your competitors that can send it instantly.
Back in the day it was " Bill always pays his bills, plus we go to the same church. Approved."BDKJMU wrote:Pretty sure back in the day, before the days of credit scores on the interwebs, people could buy vehicles the same day...they certainly didn't wait around for a couple of weeks for every credit score to come in.Skjellyfetti wrote:
So other businesses can pay them money to give them your credit information... as close to instantaneous as possible. If you're sitting at the car dealership ready to buy a car... pending credit check... the salesperson is going to be pissed if he can't work out your financing pretty **** fast. "Sorry, come back next week when we get your credit score back" would be death for car salesmen.
It's how their business model works. Yeah, credit agencies could keep it on paper files like in the olden days of yore.... but, their clients aren't going to want to wait around for a couple of weeks for every credit score to come in. They want it NOW! Even keeping all the day on air gapped computers will still slow your business down and no one would use you in favor of your competitors that can send it instantly.