Originally posted by DracoM
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Cheques: does anybody still use them?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI only ever use PayPal to receive and I use one credit card for almost all purchases (i.e. other than those very few for which credit card use is not possible).
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... my cheapo pay-as-you-go mobile phone is not clever enough to do bank-related things.
I do bank transfers etc on-line from a computer at home, and get cash when needed from ATMs. Perhaps my banking needs are less complex than others' here.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostSame here, but - as has been pointed out - some local traders, clubs and societies, and older folk who have no computer or mobile phone, or who simply don't trust the 'online world', find a cheque more convenient and safer than cash. (Our very reliable, very reasonable plumber nevertheless adds a tenner if he's paid by cheque - or does he take a tenner off if he's paid by bank transfer? He's pretty busy, so perhaps he rarely has time to get to a bank?)
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lots of traders ask for particular payment methods to reduce extortionate bank charges for depositing the money.
I don't have very complex finances, and manage very well with telephone Banking with First Direct.
Our local GP group ( 5 surgeries ) won't take anything other than cheque or cash.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 Postlots of traders ask for particular payment methods to reduce extortionate bank charges for depositing the money.
I don't have very complex finances, and manage very well with telephone Banking with First Direct.
Our local GP group ( 5 surgeries ) won't take anything other than cheque or cash.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostSame here, but - as has been pointed out - some local traders, clubs and societies, and older folk who have no computer or mobile phone, or who simply don't trust the 'online world', find a cheque more convenient and safer than cash. (Our very reliable, very reasonable plumber nevertheless adds a tenner if he's paid by cheque - or does he take a tenner off if he's paid by bank transfer? He's pretty busy, so perhaps he rarely has time to get to a bank?)
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI think banks are now allowing cheques to be scanned in by mobile phones, so that's not a reason to avoid cheques - though it may not be a good reason to accept them either.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostWith the Halifax there is a limit of £500 on the value of any cheque deposited this way, and a daily deposit limit of £1000. I haven't used the system but my partner has (with a refund for a delayed train journey) and said it worked very well. All done 'securely' via their app.
For large transfers by BACs Halifax seems to have a daily limit of £25k, while Santander might (I've not tried) have a higher limit - perhaps £100k.
How often do many of us do that, though?
I have had to do that in the last few years, but rarely - and in the limit, for really large transfers one has to go into a branch - if one can find one!
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI think banks are now allowing cheques to be scanned in by mobile phones, so that's not a reason to avoid cheques - though it may not be a good reason to accept them either.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostYou can do it on a tablet/iPad if you download the app, not just a phone!
(The lady wife refuses to get money out of the ATM outside the local branch of our building society, or any other ATM, on the grounds that, if she doesn't help keep the tellers inside the branch occupied, it might be closed - and who's to say she's wrong?)
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostPerhaps the GDPR is better than nothing, but in its effects it seems to have made the Internet clunkier than before, and it’s nothing like perfect in any case. The only way to be sure that data is not misused is to not give it out in the first place. That doesn’t help in a world in which many of us are dealing with people via online communications whom we don’t really know - such as in this communication. We need to be able to order goods and services and pay for them, so some data needs to be sent. In some relationships forms of trust are built up, and there seem to be rewards in exchanging the data. Data exchange is not limited to financial data, and simply being online allows some organisations to gather vast amounts of data about us, or make inferences based on data gathered.
It’s really rather complex, but I wouldn’t assume that legal “protections” are always (ever) going to work, either to remedy problems afterwards, or to have a significant deterrent effect.
You appear to think that because there are potential penalties for data misuse that will stop it. It’s a start, but it’s not going to prevent all such misuse, just as having speed limits on roads and penalties for bad driving doesn’t actually prevent speeding or road accidents. A legal framework which is observed and enforced can make a difference, but is not a panacea. It may reduce problems amongst those who are willing to follow the rules, but may have little effect on those who are prepared to break or ignore them.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostWhat about dinosaurs like me who are still using a desktop PC?
(The lady wife refuses to get money out of the ATM outside the local branch of our building society, or any other ATM, on the grounds that, if she doesn't help keep the tellers inside the branch occupied, it might be closed - and who's to say she's wrong?)
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