Note: forwarded message attached.


How much free photo storage do you get? Store your holiday snaps for FREE with Yahoo! Photos. Get Yahoo! Photos
--- Begin Message ---

 SCENE 1:

 A friend went to the local gym and placed his belongings in the locker.
 After the workout and a shower, he came out, saw the locker open, and
 thought to himself, "Funny, I thought
 I? locked the locker. Hmmmmm." He dressed and just flipped the wallet
to
 make sure all was in order. Everything looked okay - all cards were in
 place. A few weeks later his credit card bill came - a whooping bill of
 $14,000! He called the credit card company and started yelling at them,
 saying that he did not make the transactions. Customer care personnel
 verified that there was no mistake in the system and asked if his card
had
 been stolen.
 "No," he said, but then took out his wallet, pulled out the credit
card,
 and yep - you guessed it - a switch had been made. An expired similar
 credit card from the same bank was in the wallet. The thief broke into
his
 locker at the gym and switched cards. Verdict: The credit card issuer
said
 since he did not report the card missing earlier, he would have to pay
the
 amount owed to them. How much did he have to pay for items he did not
buy?
 $9,000! Why were there no calls made to verify the amount swiped? Small
 amounts rarely trigger a "warning bell" with some credit card
companies.
It
 just so happens that all the small amounts added up to big one!

 SCENE 2:

 A man at a local restaurant paid for his meal with his credit card. The
 bill for the meal came, he signed it, and the waitress folded the
receipt
 and passed the credit card along. Usually, he would just take it and
place
 it in his wallet or pocket. Funny enough, though, he actually took a
look
 at the card and, lo and behold, it was the expired card of another
 person. He called the waitress and she looked perplexed. She took it
back,
 apologized, and hurried back to the counter under the watchful eye of
the
 man. All the waitress did while walking to the counter was wave the
wrong
 expired card to the counter cashier, and the counter cashier
immediately
 looked down and took out the real card. No exchange of words - nothing!
She
 took it and came back to the man with an apology. Verdict: Make sure
the
 credit cards in your wallet are yours. Check the name on the card every
 time you sign for something and/or the card is taken away for even a
short
 period of time. Many people just take back the credit card without even
 looking at it, thinking that it has to be theirs.
 FOR YOUR OWN SAKE, DEVELOP THE HABIT OF CHECKING YOUR CREDIT CARD EACH
TIME
 IT IS RETURNED TO YOU AFTER A TRANSACTION!

 SCENE 3:

 Yesterday I went into a pizza restaurant to pick up an order that I had
 called in. I paid by using my Visa Cheque Card which, of course, is
linked
 directly to my chequing account. The young man behind the counter took
my
 card, swiped it, then laid it flat on the counter as he waited for the
 approval, which is pretty standard procedure. While he waited, he
picked
up
 his cell phone and started dialing. I noticed the phone because it is
the
 same model I have, but nothing seemed out of the ordinary. Then I heard
a
 click that sounded like my phone sounds when I take a picture. He then
gave
 me back my card but kept the phone in his hand as if he was still
pressing
 buttons. Meanwhile,? I'm thinking: I wonder what he is taking a picture
of,
 oblivious to what was really going on. It then dawned on me: the only
thing
 there was my credit card, so now I'm paying close attention to what he
is
 doing. He set his phone on the counter, leaving it open. About five
seconds
 later, I heard the chime that tells you that the picture has been
saved.
 Now I'm standing there struggling with the fact that this boy just took
a
 picture of my credit card. Yes, he played it off well, because had we
not
 had the same kind of phone, I probably would never have known what
 happened. Needless to say, I immediately canceled that card as I was
 walking out of the pizza parlor. All I am saying is, be aware of your
 surroundings at all times. Whenever you are using your credit cards,
take
 caution and don't be careless. Notice who is standing near you and what
 they are doing when you use your card. Be aware of phones because many
have
 a camera phone these days. When you are in a restaurant and the
 waiter/waitress brings your card and receipt for you to sign, make sure
you
 scratch the number off. Some restaurants are using only the last four
 digits, but a lot of them are still putting the whole thing on there. I
 have already been a victim of credit card fraud and, believe me, it is
not
 fun. The truth is that they can get you even when you are careful, but
 don't make it easy for them.


 FORWARD THIS TO AS MANY PEOPLE AS YOU CAN THINK OF. HELP SPREAD THE?
WORD!




--- End Message ---
_______________________________________________
Assam mailing list
Assam@pikespeak.uccs.edu
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/listinfo/assam

Mailing list FAQ:
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/assam/assam-faq.html
To unsubscribe or change options:
http://pikespeak.uccs.edu/mailman/options/assam

Reply via email to