Tried logging into Experian and NONE of my information is working. Wonderful!
Don’t worry, you’ll probably get like a $5 bill credit as an apology/settlement to never be able to sue.
Submitted 7 months ago by FenrirIII@lemmy.world to mildlyinfuriating@lemmy.world
https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/08e3998f-2f85-42eb-a631-877c6b5d8660.jpeg
Tried logging into Experian and NONE of my information is working. Wonderful!
Don’t worry, you’ll probably get like a $5 bill credit as an apology/settlement to never be able to sue.
Yeah but they probably missed the deadline, so they get nothing.
Didn’t you get that memo?
Don’t forget about the one year of free credit monitoring
To activate your free credit monitoring, enter your social security number plus your credit lock password if you have one …
The irony of being alerted by Experian:
doj.nh.gov/…/20221107-multistate-settlements.htm
Happened again 2 years later:
The irony of a billion dollar company losing my personal info and helpfully offering me credit monitoring service from the other billion dollar company that lost my info. It’s so good.
Throw into the mix: I had to do business with AT&T because they were the only ISP available to my Appartment complex. I never had the choice to not do business with these companies.
Equifax handles my company’s payroll.
Please, I want to get off Mr bones wild ride.
We finally got a viable replacement for Comcast internet. I changed the moment I was able to and couldn’t be happier. 1.2Gbps symmetrical connection for $85 a month. That plus YouTube TV is $70 cheaper than what I was paying Comcast for their garbage service that had constant outages. Before, the only options were mobile internet or Verizon DSL.
Something something pot kettle.
Buzzzzz
It’s really lame that companies like AT&T even need your SSN. Why do they need that to set up a phone line or an internet connection? There’s gotta be a better way.
To identity you
You can identify by other means. Or at least give the opportunity to use other means. If you can’t keep my personal information safe, you shouldn’t be allowed to collect it.
Then why can I buy a prepaid SIM with cash and no ID? I do this when travelling because it’s cheaper than international roaming.
If only there were some sort of moniker you went by other than a SSN. That coupled with some sort of location data could narrow you down to, ooh, one person I suppose.
In the UK we have NI number, which is used by my employer, pension provider, the tax services, the benefits office, and that’s pretty much it. It’s not used as a general source of ID by corporations.
From an outside point of view, the US system looks crazy. And that’s coming from somebody who’s country has a TV license.
Then why do our ISPs in Germany at best just need our contract confirmation and maybe a SEPA entry?
Even my bank I opened an account with just wanted to get my tax-id and my ID-number (wich changes with every re-issue).
there is no damn reason for them to identify any of their customers other than the idiots with contract phones
Something of a joke that, since the SSN is an identifier, the identity tool quickly becomes an identity theft tool once it’s been pilfered.
With humans increasingly pushed out of the customer service loop, these security scams get easier every day.
Even if there were no other way, why store it? How often do they need to re-identify you?
Why does AT&T need your SIN?!?
So they can permanently mark you as a poor when you miss a single monthly payment thus effecting your ability to do anything with money in the furutre making you poorer and perpetuating a cycle in order to trap you into a system that benefits from your suffering.
Or even better, my experience with them - they can permanently mark you as poor when the person who stole your identity in the last data beach (Thanks Experian!) doesn’t make their monthly payment, thus tanking your credit while you’re entering escrow on your first home.
Thanks AT&T, now my stolen information I never even gave you is probably back on the black market! The cycle continues.
We’ve surrounded the prisoner in piezoelectrics. The more he struggles, the more electricity he produces!
Because people finance their phones with AT&T, usually without realizing it. “Free” phones and discounted phones are not usually free or discounted. You’re forced to stay with them to get the discount off each month. I hate it because I’d rather just pay for my phone outright and be done, but then you actually pay more.
Not sure I see how you end up paying more by buying your phone outright, it’s more up front but then your monthly price for service is lower.
Goddamn are we shadowrun now? Where are the pink Mohawk orc deckers?
deckers… jesus christ thanks for activating a neuron that hadn’t stirred in 20 years
Not surprising. I wouldn’t be surprised if at some point ever person in the US will have been affected by data breaches.
That is very likely already the case, let’s be serious here. Our companies, especially the ones with really firm mono- or duopolies, give absolutely no fucks about protecting citizen data, they just have insurance to cover the damages.
The insurance requires that they take precautions. Cyber insurance is a really good thing.
Jokes on you, I’m off the grid.
-Posted from St Louis Library Roomba 2.1
Once more into the breach, eh?
This is a bit off topic and obviously bullshit, but I do recommend the social monitoring service, as well as freezing your credit. No real reason not to. I see freezing your credit as like setting a simple 2fa for your credit. You can unfreeze it at any time for free, and that extra bit of inconvenience of having to unfreeze it can stop impulse credit card sign ups. Also I have a “world class” Mastercard, but they also have free credit monitoring that I recommend. I think Visa might have something similar, but I’m not entirely sure.
I froze my credit immediately.
Yeah even if it’s not needed I personally don’t see any reason why you wouldn’t want to keep your credit frozen. I see it as like 2fa for your credit score.
Yeah same fucking boat - absolutely bullshit.
Also same. I haven't had anything to do with them since 2013 but they still somehow sent me an email. Not sure it is worth following up in, tho.
Why would AT&T need to be storing social security numbers? For debts people owe them or something?
Real answer: when people finance their phones, the provider needs to check their credit to confirm if they’re actually eligible.
The real question is, why do they retain that information?
Jesus christ we can’t outsource this to stripe or something like we do with credit card info?
Yeah there’s been a breach at at&t a long time ago. Here www.youtube.com/watch?v=KrVwKfrj57U
“American Thieves & Thugs” — Archie Bunker
I swear one day these websites like haveibeenpwned.com and the like will start collecting the data you enter
Incoming $5 check from class action lawsuit
Gigan@lemmy.world 7 months ago
The fact that your SSN is so important and still so insecure is pathetic. Thanks US government.
Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Yeah I don’t get why that is? My SSN is NE079792B, what on earth can anyone do with that info? Pay into my pension?
allywilson@sopuli.xyz 7 months ago
It’s fairly important to keep is private for US citizens, see here.
knexcar@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Wait, that’s not a correctly formatted SSN!
intensely_human@lemm.ee 7 months ago
“We identify you by a unique ID”
Wow, a unique ID! Is it secret?
“It’s totally top secret. It’s nine digits”
Nine digits
“Nine digits. With dashes in the middle.”
And so that’s how the social security office …
“Well not just social security. You see, to date it’s the only government institution that’s managed to deploy a database table so …”
So what?
“So we use it for everything”
How is is top secret?
“Well, it’s your job to keep it secret”
That shouldn’t be too hard I guess. But what happens if it’s compromised?
“We call this Identity Theft. It’s bad. Don’t let anyone else get your nine digit number”
Uh … my cell phone provider wants my unique ID. Is this a scam?
“No. Legit people are allowed to ask for your ID”
Legit people
“Any institutions we consider too legit to quit, ie too big to fail, are allowed to ask for it”
Okay
“And anyone else who’s legitimate can ask for it”
Legitimate
“Yes legitimate parties can ask for your top secret ID”
BobGnarley@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Originally wasn’t even supposed to be used for that too.