Sippin wrote:
Remianen wrote:
Plus, since I replace my cards every 6 months or so (security reasons. I do A LOT of online shopping), there's a good chance they don't have the right form of payment anyway.
Hate to derail my own thread (altho if anyone can it's the OP, right?
) but isn't this overkill? Your credit card providers must love you.
Wouldn't be easier to just to watch your credit card activity (you could log on daily if you're really paranoid) and just replace cards if/when you get unauthorized activity? You're fully protected against loss anyway. I also find these days banks are very proactive about detecting potential fraudulent activity. If I use one of my credit cards to buy something atypical for me, I will often get an email or even an automated phone call asking me to confirm that it's really ME doing the purchase. I value this kind of "intrusion" from my credit card companies since it works to keep me secure online.
You could also get a Discover card which lets you use disposable one-time-use credit card numbers. Some Visa and MC providers do the same although not the majority, which is stupid since this is one of the best ways to protect your on-line purchasing experience.
Edited, Sep 17th 2015 7:17am by Sippin First, I don't do Discover (just like I don't do Nike). Personal choice. I worked for MorganStanleyDeanWitter when they owned Discover. There are practices that occur (still!) that I don't agree with.
All it takes is ONE negative incident, where a bank decides to drag their feet on protection against unauthorized charges for most people to look for ways to mitigate their damages themselves. I've had FOUR. Problem with your supposition is, I don't have buying patterns that fit the 'average consumer'. For example, at the height of my interest, I had 20+ EQ accounts active at once, all subscribed. Most banks (at the time) had alarms that shut down a card when multiple charges of the same amount hit at around the same time, even when the account had a history of this happening.
Keep this in mind. Everything is 'overkill' to someone.....until something bad happens. Then it's "What could we have done differently?". I watch my accounts like a hawk (I am/was an accountant, it comes with the territory) but I'm fallible and I acknowledge this. I have charges ranging in amount from $4.23 to $1875.44 and I don't always immediately recognize the abbreviated name of some vendors as it appears on the charge. I also travel a lot (20+ years as a travel agent) so it's not uncommon for there to be charges from three continents on my account in a month. So I'm speaking to my banks a lot already. But I haven't had an unauthorized charge in 12 years so my method works for me and that's really all that matters.