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posts about #urbanlegends more →
A Man Finds an Actual Card Skimmer in the Wild, in the Flesh
| posts about #urbanlegends more → |
A Man Finds an Actual Card Skimmer in the Wild, in the Flesh |
04/07/09
04/07/09
04/07/09
You just saved you a world of hurt, embarrassment, having to supply fraud protection for anyone that could have used the ATM, the trust of their customers, etc. And not even a calendar?
Did the letter come postage due?
04/07/09
"The trust of their customers?" Anyone with a pulse knows these things can happen, and not every bad thing in life is preventable. I think my trust would have been broken if they DID give this guy a reward for just doing the right thing.
04/07/09
04/06/09
04/07/09
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04/06/09
::insert movie quote:: "here's an idea, it's called a mask"
but in all honesty, walk in from side of the building, duck down, camera has limited field of view, slap it on, and walk away.
04/06/09
04/07/09
Nothing...
Nothing...
Bingo!
If the existing card slot isn't in the frame then no "magical" skills would even be necessary...
04/06/09
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04/07/09
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04/06/09
Duct. T
04/06/09
04/06/09
speaking of duck roll tapes .. here's an explanation about how they manufacture them..
[tinyurl.com]
04/07/09
04/06/09
04/06/09
You could have at least tried to figure it out yourself...
04/07/09
The black stripe on the back of a credit/debit card contains a magnetic copy of pretty much everything that's stamped through the front of the card, plus your PIN and any other information that might be needed at the point of purchase (except your signature and driver's license). A card skimmer simply reads all the data from that stripe and stores it. Taking that, you can either make a fake card or punch in all the data for online transactions.
The whole process of skimming a card goes really quickly (about as fast as it takes to swipe your own card through a reader). My mom showed me an article about the dangers of using debit cards that included a story of someone who paid for a meal at a sit-down restaurant with one, and in the time it took the waitress to walk the card to the register, run the transaction, and walk it back to the customer, the data was skimmed and suddenly their bank account was getting fraudulent charges.
04/07/09
I'm open to correction, however.
04/07/09
Maybe it depends on the card, but I've been told by one financial institution that they couldn't change the PIN on a debit card because they didn't have the proper equipment to do so on-site. You get whatever random PIN the card ships with, and you better hope you can remember it. If it's as simple as changing the number in some far off database, there wouldn't be any problem like you'd get if the data on the stripe actually needed to be changed.
04/07/09
04/08/09
I've had it both ways. My last bank sent me a card with a preset PIN, but I could take it in and change it at the local branch.