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Credit Card Fraud: High Visibility Can Hurt
Great, so your site is ranked number 1 and 2 for all the keywords you can imagine. In fact, you get 2,000 orders per day with huge margins. Hey, your sitting back and enjoying the good life, aren't you? A...

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Consumerist: Fraud
con_eurekainfo.jpg A reader writes in that he noticed an unusual charge for $8.95 on his bank card recently. He looked up the number connected to the charge—866-305-8808—at the website cardskimmer.jpgPolice suspect that a card skimmer installed at a gas station in El Monte, CA is responsible for $10,000 in credit card fraud, says KNBC:"It looks like the victims were gassing up here and using the outside pump terminals, and their credit card information was compromised," El Monte police Detective Brian Glick said.

Police don't believe it was an inside job but that the fraud artists picked the station in the 4300 block North Santa Anita Avenue because of its high customer volume.

Fraudulent withdrawals, ranging from $400 to $1,500 per customer, were made in Las Vegas, Palms Springs and New York, police said. Police didn't find the device, but think that 45 credit/debit accounts with transactions from the same gas station is, uh, a bit of a coincidence.

con_fraudsting.jpg Freddie Mac debtfaker.jpgverizzy.jpgVerizon is finally installing FiOS in my area. But I'll never use it. I'll never sign up for another Verizon account in my life, and I'm encouraging my parents to change to a different service when their Verizon cell contracts end soon. Over the course of eight months, I've become completely appalled at the horrible customer service I've gotten from that company.

This all started in March of this year, St. Patrick's Day, to be precise. While out with friends, my phone slipped out of my pocket without me noticing. It wasn't until the next morning (Sunday) that I realized I didn't have my LG Chocolate phone. I traced my footsteps back, hoping I'd be able to find it, with no luck. A couple of hours later, when my roommate woke up, he realized he had a missed call. Hours after I lost the phone, someone had called his number from it. They left no message, and when we tried calling the phone back, it would go straight to voicemail. Hoping that whoever had the phone would call back again, I held off on contacting Verizon to report the phone stolen. By Monday morning, having still not been able to contact the person who had my phone, I called Verizon and reported all the details I've relayed so far - not only that my phone was lost, but that someone apparently had the phone. I was told that the phone would be placed on Verizon's lost/stolen list so that if someone else attempted to register the phone on a Verizon Wireless account, they would be able to do so (although I would not be given this information to help me find the phone). The phone would also be deactivated for a month and would be removed from my account.

Writing the phone off as gone, I bought a used Verizon Razr off eBay, which I received within a few days. I once again called up Verizon Customer Service. In that call, I registered the Razr with my account, and also checked again that my old phone was off my account. I was told that because my account was a single-phone plan, there was no way for both the Chocolate and the Razr to be registered simultaneously. The Razr was associated with my account, and therefor the Chocolate could no longer be used with my account.

Fast forward one month, towards the end of April. I logged into my bank's online access, and realized I had a negative amount of money, when I should have had a few hundred dollars. Looking at the pending transactions, a charge of $435.03 had been debited from my account the day before.