On-line banking hassles
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amateur51
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOne day you may well be old and senile, Resurrection Man. When that day comes I really do hope someone repeats to you what you have written in that last line. I find these complications of life increasingly hard to process, true, but it is where those who really can't cope and are on their own find themselves, or one day will, that really draw my sympathies.
There's an understandable tendency to regard the "online world" as qualitatively different from the "real world" at some basic level, partially as a result of all the hyperbolic b-**-*ks to this effect that's generated. Mostly, it's really just a question of the mechanics of accomplishing some task.
The question of "How easy do you want to make it for somebody to get access to your money and nick it all?" has the same answer in either context. In the "real world" that means putting physical security (secure buildings, security guards, safes etc) between them and it. The same physical security also ends up between you and it. This results in a mixture of inconvenience and complexity for you, and/or having to trust other people (bank employees, family, friends) to help you with it.
Exactly the same principle applies "online". The great difficulty that needs to be put in the way of anyone trying to get unauthorised access to your stuff creates inconvenience and complexity for you. In the same way that a safe is only as good as the difficulty of guessing the combination or blowing the doors off, verifying that someone is who they claim they to be necessarily requires them to be able to provide a set of bits of information that would be near-impossible for an impostor to obtain by simple means.
This circle cannot be squared.
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostS_A I have banked online for a decade or more with one particular operator and (touching wood with all available exposed flesh ) I have never had a second's bother, indeed they have been much better than real banks I've used in the past (or a trunk under the bed).
If you are interested, send me a PM and I'll tell you more.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOne day you may well be old and senile, Resurrection Man. When that day comes I really do hope someone repeats to you what you have written in that last line. I find these complications of life increasingly hard to process, true, but it is where those who really can't cope and are on their own find themselves, or one day will, that really draw my sympathies.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostSympathy for other people, particularly with those stuggling with the complexities of the modern world (which are usually based in the desire for extra profit), is pretty unfashionable these days.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 03-05-12, 20:42.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by mangerton View PostYes, true, but I have the original document, the same age as me, and a certified copy, though legally as good, is not quite the same. I have a number of original documents belonging to my family, and I feel there is something rather special about them.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostSympathy for other people, particularly with those stuggling with the complexities of the modern world (which are usually based in the desire for extra profit), is pretty unfashionable these days.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostWe seem to be excelling with the hyperbole on this one. It really stretches the imagination to see the link between asking and commenting on exactly where the difficulty was in supplying one's mother's date of birth within the context of establishing one's bona fides and 'extra profit'. Also giving your mother's date of birth is hardly up there with 'technological challenge of the Century'.
The commercial world is a very unforgiving place. I know, I work in it, and have for 25 years.And it is getting worse.
Dog wagging tail. Banks running the world. Our banks. Our world.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by teamsaint View Postwell, don't worry about it then , just carry on being unsympathetic.
The commercial world is a very unforgiving place. I know, I work in it, and have for 25 years.And it is getting worse.
Dog wagging tail. Banks running the world. Our banks. Our world.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostThe public sector is just as unforgiving!! One in seven workers being flushed down the tubes!
Was ok when I was in it, though it was a refuge for idlers and drinkers. (I wasn't in those groups, obviously !!).
My job was kept open for me to walk back into, any time i wanted, for 3 years from the date of resignation !!I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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