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Re: Credit cards, false names, and important details
>
Jim Hart>
> Duncan Frissel:
> > The many people who have gotten anonymous Visa and Mastercard credit cards
> > for example have used the simple scheme of applying for a secured credit
> > card in a nome de guerre.
>
> How is this simple? A credit card company sure as hell wants
> to known who you truly are and where you truly live. It must
> be able to collect its debt and mark your credit rating.
> Applying for a credit card with false name or Social Security
> number is fraud, with heavy punishments. Or are there, yet
> again, numerous details you are neglecting to mention?
>
I called Dave Lovejoy, a longtime credit manager and currently product
line manager for Data Rental's line of credit retrieval terminals. He confirmed
for me what I had always understood; with _secured_ credit cards, no one
really cares who you are, as you have secured your card with a cash
deposit (typically 110% of your limit) and collection is no problem.
I have no idea as to the legalities of all this.
BTW Data Rentals is one of the major suppliers of credit retrieval equipment
to credit grantors, marketing towards the small-to-medium sized operations
(that is, those who don't buy their reports directly from the bureaus on tape.)
I wrote the software for their DRS-2000 automated credit terminal, as well
as their credit cartridge for the TI 700 printing terminal.
JJH
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