Do you have credit card debt? Here's an easy solution that may work for you! Give them money!
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Sirius wrote:I generally avoid...
Well at this point I'm toying with the idea of cutting my credit card with a sharpened stick, to see if evil spirits come out. I think the only thing I want my credit card account for is to have the ability to overdraft and be reimbursed with the available credit. If I pay it off before the next billing period it would be cheaper than getting that "overdraft protection" junk. But that's rare so I might just close the evil thing.Bet51987 wrote:I have no debt. I never buy...
That drives me nuts. A cab will only take cash or credit and I hate carrying lots of cash on me... I might have to keep the card in it's present condition.DCrazy wrote:I have never had a credit card. Then one day...
NMgrizz wrote:About year 3, we got a Discover card, which pays us money back at the end of the year. We put everything we can now on our rebate type cards, and pay them off every month. We get somewhere between $300-500 back at the end of every year, and that's our guilt free mad money we use to celebrate our anniversary every year.
CORD wrote:I have no cc debt, but do have a cc just for hotel/car rental type things. I also only have 7 years left on my mortgage.
Grizz, rebate/reward/miles CC's are bad news for merchants. How do think the rewards/miles/rebates are paid for. TANSTAFL Merchants foot the bill. I have a business that takes CC's but refuse to take those cards and also AE and Discover. The cost of taking those cards is skyrocketing for the merchant. AE demands 4 % of every sale. Discover is almost 4%. All the reward type cards charge 1-2 % above the regular rate of acceptence. So it's a great tool to get people to use CC's, but not good for themerchant.
Yep. Amusing but true: the easiest way to steal others' information is to target the human, not the machines in between.Krom wrote:On my news sites that I read all the big credit card breaches that have been reported in the last few years have all been fraud at card processing companies and the vast majority of the numbers stolen were from brick and mortar establishments, not internet sites.
Yes, it's very frustrating to my wife. She runs a small business and the government has thrown so many "credit card security" regulations and fees at her that it is likely to make her shut down. And yet, she's NEVER lost a single credit card number. The big companies though, loose them by the hundreds of thousands at a time.Krom wrote: I read all the big credit card breaches that have been reported in the last few years have all been fraud at card processing companies and the vast majority of the numbers stolen were from brick and mortar establishments, not internet sites.
Did you hear about the idiot, who stepped out of a car with top secret info in his hand, face up…lol. I don’t know why but what you said made me think of that.Sirius wrote:Yep. Amusing but true: the easiest way to steal others' information is to target the human, not the machines in between.
Nobody likes a crybaby, OK?CORD wrote:Grizz, stop repressing me...