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Federal Agency Data-Mining Hundreds of Millions of Credit Card Accounts

An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from the Washington Examiner: "Officials at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are conducting a massive, NSA-esque data-mining project collecting account information on an estimated 991 million American credit card accounts. It was also learned at a Congressional hearing Tuesday that CFPB officials are working with the Federal Housing Finance Agency on a second data-mining effort, this one focused on the 53 million residential mortgages taken out by Americans since 1998. ...Later in the hearing, [Rep. Randy Neugebauer, R-Texas] remarked that CFPB 'and NSA are in a contest of who can collect the most information,' ... although the CFPB disagreed with that statement. In previous testimony before Rep. Jeb Hensarling's panel, Antonakes said 'the combined data represents approximately 85-90 percent of outstanding card balances.' The Argus contract specifies that the company must collect 96 'data points' from each of the participating card issuers for each credit card account on a monthly basis. The 96 data points include a unique card-account identification reference number, ZIP code, monthly ending balance, borrower's income, FICO score, credit limit, monthly payment amount, and days past due. 'Would you object to getting permission from consumers, those people who you work for, before you collect and monitor their information?' Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., asked Cordray. 'That would make it impossible to get the data,' Cordray replied."

176 of 264 comments (clear)

  1. I'm somewhat disturbed... by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That this appears to state every person in the US, regardless of age, has on average three credit cards.

    Adjusting out the 17 and unders and the elderly who are less likely to be stacking up credit purchases on retirement budgets, this suggests about 5 cards per person.

    Yeek.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by coolsnowmen · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think a lot of people have credit cards they no longer use, forgot about, and haven't completly canceled. It wasn't until I got my first house, and so got a long form credit report, that I realized I had a credit card still open that I got in college....for a free t-shirt and CD.

    2. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by Mitreya · · Score: 1

      That this appears to state every person in the US, regardless of age, has on average three credit cards.

      The data is surely skewed by "financing" offers. I bought some furniture a couple of years ago and in order to get my discount they effectively opened a credit card account (basically same as Macy's cards and their ilk). Of course I never used it beyond paying off my balance, because the rates were atrocious. But I believe it would count as an extra account.

    3. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by ffkom · · Score: 1

      The text didn't state that all accounts were active ones. But yes, US citizens seem to have have a strong habit to live on credit. As a non-US citizen I was surprised to learn that permanently being in debt is so popular even amongst well earning people. That is very different where I live (Germany), where credit cards are not quite as popular.

    4. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by CODiNE · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It takes that many cards to hold all the debt an average American family has

      http://www.nerdwallet.com/blog...

      O_o
      That's crazy high!

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    5. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by dyingtolive · · Score: 2

      I have three "credit cards". I have a bank debit card, a paypal debit card, and then a credit card that's an actual credit card.

      Technically if you count the cheesy ass HSA debit card that my employer considers "health insurance", then I've got four. Only one of them is a "real" credit card (as in, buying things on money I don't have).

      --
      Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
    6. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NatasRevol · · Score: 3, Funny

      Heh, in college, I got a Discover card with a 2 liter bottle of Sunkist soda.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    7. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      That this appears to state every person in the US, regardless of age, has on average three credit cards.

      The data is surely skewed by "financing" offers. I bought some furniture a couple of years ago and in order to get my discount they effectively opened a credit card account (basically same as Macy's cards and their ilk). Of course I never used it beyond paying off my balance, because the rates were atrocious. But I believe it would count as an extra account.

      I wasn't comfortable with having many cards. I did have one from a few department stores, back when I was first trying build a credit score. I purposely closed each one of them, but one, which expired and was closed out by the store (I was in Chicago on a trip and saw a cool jacket I wanted - the store did not take my Visa card, but would take American Express or their store card, so they opened a store card account with a tiny little limit.) I know where I have accounts and within $100 what the balances are on them. As I'm rapidly approaching a positive net I'm getting an absolute shower of offers, pre-approvals, etc. Including these scary things from financial institutions listed as on Tribal Lands, which have some of the most alarming interest rates I've ever seen.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    8. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Heh, in college, I got a Discover card with a 2 liter bottle of Sunkist soda.

      Somewhere I have a T-shirt from a credit card company for filling out an application. (I did get the card and still have it, as my sole credit card) But what tool goes around wearing a [Credit Card Company] shirt?

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    9. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by jratcliffe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have about 15 cards. Only use three of them. The rest are ones I got for the signup bonuses, or have stopped using because other cards offered a better deal (points, cashback, etc.). Unless there's an annual fee, there's no good reason to close them, so they sit in the safe.

    10. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by John.Banister · · Score: 2

      I have several credit cards. None of them charge me to have an account, and they all have a zero balance. They're useful when renting a car, as car rental companies don't like debit cards, and they also came in useful when my credit union froze my debit card until I convinced them that donating to the neoN900 project wasn't suspicious activity. Having credit cards isn't necessarily identical to having debt.

    11. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by vux984 · · Score: 2

      Pretty much this. Everytime I walk into a Sear or Target or anything else they want me to pay with their store credit card and offer from 15 to 25% off my purchase to apply for one.

      At the moment, I have one CC I use for almost everything. My wife uses a spousal card so we accumulate rewards on one card. She has her own card as well so she has credit in her own name...

      But sure, last time I bought a home, I closed a few pointless credit accounts that I'd opened over the years for various signing benefits as part of "cleaning up my credit". I had a department store card I'd signed up for to get a 25% discount off my couch some years ago and never used again, and another visa that was attached to a gas station that at the time i signed up had a promo that gave me 15 cents a liter off the pump price, and i stopped using it after the promo ended... etc.

    12. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by mk1004 · · Score: 1

      The same kind of tool that wears a polo shirt with an alligator image on it (yes, I know, an ancient example), or any number of other clothing items. I guess you were never a teenager.

      --
      I can mend the break of day, heal a broken heart, and provide temporary relief to nymphomaniacs.
    13. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      It takes that many cards to hold all the debt an average American family has

      http://www.nerdwallet.com/blog...

      O_o
      That's crazy high!

      About 9 years back I received a pre-approved offer for a credit card (Visa, IIRC) with a limit of $100,000. I tore that sucker up into teensy-weensy bits. The utterly bizarre thing was I didn't gross that at the time (though I was close.)

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    14. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      somebody who doesn't want to bother wasting a perfectly good tshirt, and needs something to wear when cleaning out gutters or painting a house.

    15. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by Delarth799 · · Score: 3, Funny

      There is a British company named Wonga who's APR is just a tad over 5850%

    16. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

      About 9 years back I received a pre-approved offer for a credit card (Visa, IIRC) with a limit of $100,000. I tore that sucker up into teensy-weensy bits.

      I've got a couple like that.

      I use them regularly, and (hopefully) annoy the CC company by paying my bill, in full, every single month.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    17. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      There is a British company named Wonga who's APR is just a tad over 5850%

      And NUFC forward Papiss Cissé objected to wearing the shirt sponsor's logo on moral and religious grounds. Fair play to him.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    18. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by ls671 · · Score: 1

      Those "pre-approved offer" are just a marketing scheme. They don't do any credit checks before sending them out.

      The credit check occurs when you reply to the offer. Then, they may refuse you or say; "After review, we can provide you with a limit of $5,000 or $10,000.

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    19. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by cusco · · Score: 1

      Wait until you buy a house. When we bought ours we were flooded with credit card offers, one week the total value of all the card offers was $250,000. That was 50% more than we had just paid for the house.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    20. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      I would be much more worried if every man, woman, and child in the US carried a balance on their three credit cards.

      For me, I have three business credit cards and at least 5 personal credit cards. Only 3 of the total are used with any regularity, for specific purposes. The remainder are either emergency cards (stored in home safe), contingency cards for another specific purpose, or cards I have forgotten about. None of them carry a balance.

    21. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by csumpi · · Score: 1

      That this appears to state every person in the US, regardless of age, has on average three credit cards.

      Why on earth does that disturb you? I have probably 30. Or 50. I don't even know.

      The balance on all of them is 0. That's what matters.

      In fact, you don't even need a credit card to be in debt, if that's what you are getting to. You can get a student loan, a car loan, a mortgage, that's like 500k in debt right there. Without ever having a credit card (although having credit cards helps you establish credit so you can get the loans mentioned.)

      .

    22. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by blackest_k · · Score: 2

      There is an American company with a British subsiduary named wonga with a apr of that sort of figure apr.
      There was an interesting documentary about bank of dave a small bank set up by a businessman called dave. In this documentary he looked into the payday loan companies and actually went round to the uk offices of many of these companies all of which were just mail forwarding addresses and all pretty much run by American companies. Some offices were just empty buildings.

      Britain does have a problem having a government unwilling to regulate in anyway. There is even an industry body for these payday loan companies and they will not even contemplate a figure for an apr which would be considered excessive.

      Dave actually did put money into giving loans at reasonable rates and he was getting the payments back. As these high risk clients were more than willing to pay for loans at reasonable rates.

       

    23. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by w_dragon · · Score: 1

      Every purchase you make on a credit card the merchant pays a portion to the credit card company, generally 1-3%. The interest on balances is actually a small portion of the major cards' profits.

    24. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of people have credit cards they no longer use, forgot about, and haven't completly canceled. It wasn't until I got my first house, and so got a long form credit report, that I realized I had a credit card still open that I got in college....for a free t-shirt and CD.

      This.

      Even in Australia, which has very strict laws governing credit cards, there are still sneaky ways to give people credit cards (that usually have very bad terms). One of the biggest tricks is to tack a CC onto another credit application. People get TV's and what not on these 24 month intrest free deals but dont read the fine print that states it also signs them up for a credit card with that same company. I'm fairly certain that wont be the worst abuse hidden in the fine print either.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    25. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Pretty much this. Everytime I walk into a Sear or Target or anything else they want me to pay with their store credit card and offer from 15 to 25% off my purchase to apply for one.

      They do this because every time you use a credit card in their store, it costs them (merchant service fees).

      If they get you using their credit card, they will have to pay fewer fees.

      For a business that does as many transactions as target, the costs for accepting CC's will outstrip their staffing costs.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    26. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Not sure I really care what the merchant is getting charged by the CC company, unless the merchant gives me cash discount.

      And I haven't noticed merchants giving cash discounts for a long time.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    27. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by chipschap · · Score: 2

      I always pay in full every month, and it caused me to be refused a higher line of credit. Bank of America told me that I didn't have a record of monthly payments (which I did, as I paid in full every month on every credit card, but I guess that doesn't count as they weren't installment payments or loan payments) and therefore didn't qualify for more credit. Then they said that they ran a credit check, and my credit score was 820 (850 is the max you can have), and appended tips for improving my credit rating!

      Of course Bank of America is one of the more evil players (they too highlight the minimum balance and have no "auto-pay full balance" option), but then again most of the players are evil to some degree.

    28. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by SCPaPaJoe · · Score: 1

      My bank just recently cancelled my first credit card for inactivity. I got the card 25 years ago while I was in college. Being a long standing revolving credit account, its closure lowered my FICO score by 15 points.

    29. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      And I haven't noticed merchants giving cash discounts for a long time.

      They still exist, but are rare. Most commonly, I see this at gas stations for some reason -- and there, it's actually somewhat frequent (though by no means common anymore).

    30. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 4, Informative

      Unless there's an annual fee, there's no good reason to close them, so they sit in the safe.

      In fact, depending on your financial situation, it may actually hurt your credit scores to close them.

      Nobody knows the exact details of how the FICO algorithm works, but one significant component is your "debt-to-credit ratio." To take a simple example -- if, say, you have $4,000 in credit card debt, but a $10,000 limit, you have a credit utilization of 40%.

      Technically, they do this with installment loans too (like car payments, mortgages, etc.), but as long as you don't have late payments on them, there's little chance that it will hurt you even if you still owe quite a bit.

      So, the discussion is usually mostly around revolving credit, which for most people is credit cards. From people who have tried to figure out the FICO algorithm (as much as possible), it seems clear that it's generally a bad idea to hold more than 25 to 30% of the credit limit on any given credit card.

      But this also applies to your collective available credit limit as well, which is where those extra cards can come in. Keep in mind that even if you pay off your balances every month, the statement balances still generally show up on your credit report -- so if you charge $5,000 every month but pay it off, it still looks like you're carrying roughly a $5,000 balance.

      And if you only have $10,000 in revolving credit, that looks bad (50% credit utilization). But if you have a few other cards laying around that you never use, and your total limit is more like $50,000 or $100,000, that looks very good.

      Important points: (1) This isn't going to make or break your credit score for most people, but if the debt-to-credit ratio is really off, it could hurt it by 50 points or more. So, (2) Think twice before cancelling any high-limit cards, if you don't have a lot of credit in general. There's no good reason to hold onto a store card with a $500 limit for most people, but getting rid of that $25,000 limit card you never use could actually make a dent in your credit score, depending on the rest of your finances.

    31. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      until those unused cards bite you in the ass because someone in bolivia created a card with a matching number.

      In my case, I've got a note in my credit file - It's against my religion to pay for credit - issue at your own risk as I will not pay.

      I no longer even get those pesky Pre-Approved offers since they ended up with 100k in debt that will never be paid (that's been in my report since I was 18 as it is true).

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    32. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

      Those "pre-approved offer" are just a marketing scheme. They don't do any credit checks before sending them out.

      The credit check occurs when you reply to the offer. Then, they may refuse you or say; "After review, we can provide you with a limit of $5,000 or $10,000.

      This is correct. The way the CC companies operate these is to get average credit scores for specific areas (zip codes, generally) or for people in specific groups. Fairly sophisticated statistical analyses (based on demographic profiles) are used to determine what offers are appropriate.

      --
      No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
    33. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by crackspackle · · Score: 1

      Better or Worse, getting more credit and using it responsibly is the key to getting even more credit, particularly the more difficult products like lines of credits, construction loans, restoration loans, business loans and so forth. It's also the key to getting higher balances on new and existing cards. After totally destroying my credit during college, the first card I got again had a $500 limit. 5 year later, I had three cards and about $20K and needed it all to pay for a European business trip that ultimately would be reimbursed by my employer.

      A few more years, I had six cards and close to $100K. I also had a $220K mortgage on and $400K house. A builder was preparing to replace a beautiful field beside my house with 60 town homes. I knew I would hate it but that I could also rent my house out for much more than the payments, so I did and bought another $350K historic house with a $260K mortgage while keeping the other. Being almost 100 years old, it needed nearly $120K in work. I paid part in cash and got a line of credit for $60K to finish the job. Done and 8 months later, I refinance the $60K back into the first but the house was now worth $550K, so I made nearly 80K on the deal. I then closed the line of credit. I still have the six cards.

      Yes, I've been fortunate but I make an average IT salary. Many can do much more, some may do less at first, but anyone can find a smart ways to use their credit and it pays to develop it. There are three basic rules: One, always pay on time. Two, try to show some but 1% utilization. Three, never close old credit. You can still pay off your cards and avoid interest on rule 2 by letting the statement cut and then paying. For rule 3, with time and a good record, you can probably get your provider to upgrade your card without changing it, so it never has to be closed.

    34. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      If they get you using their credit card, they will have to pay fewer fees. For a business that does as many transactions as target, the costs for accepting CC's will outstrip their staffing costs.

      They could do what the local gas station does and offer a cash discount, but than they can't trap people with 20.99% APR interest.

    35. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      Just about every gas station in NJ has a cash discount price now. There is no added convenience of using a credit card here anyway as a pump jockey tenders the transaction right at your car.

    36. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      Actually they do pull your credit. Its called a "soft pull" and they are listed on your credit report as such. American Express is notorious for doing them. Someone with crappy credit isn't going to get the same "pre-approved" offers that someone with good credit has.

    37. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      People get TV's and what not on these 24 month intrest free deals but dont read the fine print that states it also signs them up for a credit card with that same company. I'm fairly certain that wont be the worst abuse hidden in the fine print either.

      Its not sneaky, you are opening a revolving credit account and charging the purchase to it with special repayment terms. Its commonplace in the US to the point that it is now impossible to get a traditional installment loan on any financed purchase outside of a car loan.

    38. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by gargleblast · · Score: 1

      You don't (annoy the CC company). Of course, they like reliable payers who carry some balance, but I wouldn't be surprised if you said "you must choose to keep only those card holders who always pay in full or only everyone else" (and normalize the numbers so the spend&pay amounts are the same), they'd choose you (and me).

      I'm afraid you have that completely backwards. A person who pays off their credit card in full, on time, pays no interest, and generates low (or even negative) revenue for the CC company. That is very annoying to the CC company and the person is, in industry parlance, a deadbeat .

      Sure, there's a little less potential for income ...

      Nup. A hell of a lot less actual income.

    39. Re: I'm somewhat disturbed... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Your credit score is based on several factors. But here is the short version:

      1. Don't open up too many lines of credit. It's best to keep it under four credit cards. Ideally, stay with just three if you're still paying off a car loan.

      2. Don't ride your credit accounts to the max and pay off just the minimum. OTOH, don't pay off the card each month. There is zen to this. Keep your revolving credit low, but stay in minimum debt so as to prove being responsible.

      3. Never be late on your payments.

      4. I repeat myself. NEVER be late on payments.

      Do all this, and you can maintain a credit score of the top 1% of Americans even if you only pull 50k a year.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    40. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 2

      I've known for a long time that Bank of America is vastly evil. I wasn't aware they were comically evil. That tale would be funnier if it wasn't so symptomatic of everything that's wrong with the banking industry.

    41. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by mjwx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      People get TV's and what not on these 24 month intrest free deals but dont read the fine print that states it also signs them up for a credit card with that same company. I'm fairly certain that wont be the worst abuse hidden in the fine print either.

      Its not sneaky, you are opening a revolving credit account and charging the purchase to it with special repayment terms. Its commonplace in the US to the point that it is now impossible to get a traditional installment loan on any financed purchase outside of a car loan.

      Actually it is sneaky because you're not opening a credit account at all, you're opening a secured loan.

      What they are doing is paperclipping a second revolving credit account onto that which is not attached to the asset/object being purchased on the loan. If they attached it to the loan (which they aren't permitted to in Oz) they'd be forced to close the account when final payment is received.

      Its commonplace in the US to the point that it is now impossible to get a traditional installment loan on any financed purchase outside of a car loan.

      You've just pointed out the way the US deals with credit is fundamentally broken.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    42. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by stenvar · · Score: 1

      You need three credit cards (or at least three lines of credit). Less than that and your credit score suffers. Multiple credit cards are a sign that several companies have looked at you and trust you. That's the theory at least.

    43. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 1

      Having credit cards, and even using them does not mean living on credit or being in debt.

      My "main" credit card gives me 2% back on everything I purchase. Every time there is $50 or more it is deposited directly into my account. No fuss, no muss. 2% off everything it purchases.

      I pay my bill every month. Zero cost to me, 2% back vs paying cash (writing a check, whatever).

      I charge my cable, telephone, newspaper (yes), cell phone, and a few other "no fee for credit card auto-pay" bills with this card. I get several hundred dollars a year back, so why not? It is not like "they" don't already have my phone records if they want them....

      Besides, there are some things that are hard to do without a "credit" card.

      --
      This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
    44. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      My college switched credit card handlers and now charges 2% extra if you pay your tuition by credit card. Needless to say, most students VERY quickly switched to cash or money transfer. 2% adds up when paying multiple thousand dollars at once!

    45. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by dcollins117 · · Score: 2

      I think a lot of people have credit cards they no longer use, forgot about, and haven't completly canceled.

      If you carry a balance, which I suspect most people do, then cancelling a credit account hurts your credit score as the ratio of total credit vs. your balance is used in calculating the score. Of course the same institutions that provide credit are the ones most concerned with your score, so it's likely the system was designed that way for a reason. Hint: not to benefit you, the average consumer.

    46. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by jratcliffe · · Score: 1

      until those unused cards bite you in the ass because someone in bolivia created a card with a matching number.

      I've had that happen exactly once, and it didn't cost me a dime. Card issuer reversed the charge, done and done.

    47. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by the_arrow · · Score: 2

      The same kind of tool that wears a polo shirt with an alligator image on it

      I do that sometimes. But then it was my wife who bought the shirt so I kind of have wear it sometimes. So I'm not a tool of the brand, I'm a tool of my wife!

      --
      / The Arrow
      "How lovely you are. So lovely in my straightjacket..." - Nny
    48. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      This is due to our strong state governments. (which I don't necessarily disagree with) Unfortunately 49 states can make good laws, but one decides to shit in the punch bowl and the Supreme Court decided we all have to drink it
      As a consequence, most states have dropped their own good laws in order to attract businesses.

    49. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by cdwiegand · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's often (not always) against contract to charge a fee for using credit cards, but apparently legally offering a discount for cash is not equal to that, so they get away by doing it that way (it also skirts the State's laws for those that have it on the books as illegal). Colorado gas stations are starting to do it this way, by saying you get a cash discount instead of saying there's a surcharge for using credit cards. The same net result, but worded differently. I think it should be illegal, but don't have the resources to take them to court.

      --
      . Define sqrt(x) as something really evil like (x / rand()), and bury it deep. Watch your coworkers go nuts.
    50. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      And their definition of "carrying a balance" isn't the same as mine. We use credit cards to pay for most of what we buy, and pay the balances every billing cycle. This means that we don't think of them as carrying a balance, since we never carry over a balance or pay any interest. On the other hand, given the billing cycle, there's always between one and two months of activity on the balance they keep. Once when we refinanced our house the mortgage person commented on our credit card debt being unusually high.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    51. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Agreeing with parent on this. I keep two credit cards (different types since not all merchants take certain ones), and pay them off every month. I charge pretty much everything, getting points on one, and cash back on the other. Getting money back from paying my kids $120k education was a bonus.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    52. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by nmr_andrew · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid you have that completely backwards. A person who pays off their credit card in full, on time, pays no interest, and generates low (or even negative) revenue for the CC company.

      I have to call complete BS on this. The CC company makes no additional income on this person, other than the merchant fees they collect on each and every transaction. For a very large retailer like Target or Walmart, this may come to only 20 cents + 1% or so of each and every transaction (times however many tens of millions of transactions that those stores they process each month), for small merchants it could be more like 60-70 cents + 3% or more.

      So, assume I make 5 transactions of $50 each in a month at mid-sized merchants but then pay my bill in full. So, figure 5 x 40 cents + 2.5% of $250, for $8.25. If it costs them a full $1 to mail my statement and process my electronic payment, they made $7.25 on me.

    53. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by MrResistor · · Score: 1

      Even if you don't carry a balance, cancelling a card still hurts your score since the reporting agencies don't distinguish between reasons why that line of credit was cancelled.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    54. Re:I'm somewhat disturbed... by captainlavender · · Score: 1

      Wow. Predatory!

  2. Different from the NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you conduct a financial transaction in the USA it is not private in any way. This includes information on your account balances and your income, which the IRS is already required to know about. The FICO score and other credit information is interesting though: this is the first time the government has ever bothered to look at the private credit market's practices in a substantial manner beyond giving people the right to know what their FICO score is.

    1. Re:Different from the NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      > your account balances and your income, which the IRS is already required to know about.

      The part about account balances is not correct. Your 1099-INT does not contain your account balances. I've worked in a bank for nearly twenty years, and other than when we get court orders, I've never heard of someone giving an account balance to the IRS. I know for a fact there's no automated way for them to get that information since I'm the only person here that could write that code. The interest is reported because you pay taxes on it, but they do not receive the balance.

      > people the right to know what their FICO score is.

      You're wrong again. You do not have the right to know your FICO score. Fair, Isaac, and Company has no legal requirement to tell you their score. You do have the right to a copy of your credit report, but the FICO score is something else entirely.

    2. Re:Different from the NSA by Cryacin · · Score: 2

      If interest is reported, then there is an easy calculation to get the balance.

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    3. Re:Different from the NSA by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Unless you took it all out half way through the year....

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    4. Re:Different from the NSA by jratcliffe · · Score: 2

      If interest is reported, then there is an easy calculation to get the balance.

      No, there's really not. If my 1099 reports $100 in interest, I could have (using the rates on accounts I actually have) anywhere from $4k in the account (if it's my 2.5% checking account) to $111k (if it's my 0.1% checking account).

      In addition, even if you did know the rate on the account, you'd only know the average balance through the year - that $100 in interest could mean that I had $111k in my checking account all year, or $5 million for a week.

    5. Re:Different from the NSA by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

      If you conduct a financial transaction in the USA it is not private in any way.

      Irrelevant. The US government is not allowed to aggregate data and compile dossiers on every citizen. There is a difference between an "expectation of privacy" and being stalked or having automated fishing expeditions..etc being run against people for any reason where there is no specific cause or reason to suspect.

    6. Re:Different from the NSA by tranquilidad · · Score: 1

      I don't expect the government to be making ANY social economic decisions, informed or otherwise.

      Expecting, or even allowing, the government to make those decisions reverses the relationship that should exist between citizen and government. If, on the other hand, we were subjects then they could probably do damn well as they please.

    7. Re:Different from the NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I know for a fact there's no automated way for them to get that information since I'm the only person here that could write that code.

      As someone who recently refinanced their mortgage and went over the full credit report with the lender and saw account balances for all my bank accounts within that report, I find that really really hard to believe.

    8. Re:Different from the NSA by lgw · · Score: 2

      It's amazing how, whenever anyone objects to some portion of what the government does, there's always some totalitarian-lover who will reply and say "ooh, so you must be against roads and law enforcement, you evil man". Keep dry-humping that strawman long enough and it will ignite!

      The government does many, many things. I object to many of them being done by the federal government. Some can be done just as well by state or local governments (why do tax dollars flow through the federal government in order to come back to the states for road building?) Some could be done just as well with quite minimal government involvement: same social safety net, no money flowing through government hands and getting skimmed.

      But somehow any suggestion that maybe the federal government could be just a teeny bit smaller, that maybe we should oppose totalitarian government and instead treat government as an optimization exercise (how to solve each problem with the least of it), provokes this sort of nonsense post.

      Unless you really want a totalitarian government as an end in itself, how can you object to solving problems with less of that?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    9. Re:Different from the NSA by kinthalas · · Score: 1

      Why are states optimal? Is it because 50-200+ years ago, this patch of geography was chosen to be grouped together? How does this imply that all states have the resources necessary for their own road building? By directing those funds at the federal level, you can average out those differences, and ensure that if you drive across the country, you don't have to deal with roads of different quality. This should then allow equal benefits from interstate commerce. The same argument applies for a common social safety net, as you then can minimize the differences in poverty/health/nutrition in a way that doesn't require all states to have identical resources per citizen.

      But there's this constant push to decentralize things, and "let the states handle this" so they offer different things, and solve things via competition. Why would you want competition between states? Who benefits from something like that? How many companies do you know that construct teams to work on identical problems in competition? What would happen if you did that? You'd get something like Sears ( http://www.businessweek.com/ar... ), where because of the competition, you have parts of the company actively opposing other parts to receive resources, causing the entire thing to lose out.

      Not everything is a scheme to force Stalin-like five year plans on the nation. Not everything is a slippery slope to totalitarianism.

    10. Re:Different from the NSA by Cryacin · · Score: 1

      You earned $100k in interest in a bank account. You are a person of interest to the IRS.

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    11. Re:Different from the NSA by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      considering that Medicare/Social Security is paid for by anyone working in the United States (called FICA - Federal Insurance Contribution Act), I have no issue with the government collecting information in regards to that. Unemployment is partly paid for by everyone who works in the United States (2% tax rate called FUTA - Federal Unemployment Tax Act). As to stuff like the FDIC, it's not me that pays for that nor does my financial institution have to carry it (they're not a bank but a credit union). As to things like tax credits, energy conservation efforts, law enforcement and such are paid for by property taxes. Road and Transportation taxes are a combination of tax on Fuel and commercial vehicles along with Vehicle Registration Fees, that do not impact me on a regular basis as I don't buy fuel nor do I own a vehicle that requires a license plate.

      So there's how your straw man argument is full of shit. Please remove your "Primary Sensory Organs from your Solid Waste Disposal Chute" as I can't hear you over the rest of the crickets.

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    12. Re:Different from the NSA by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      Actually under the new laws, you do have the Right to your FICO score.

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    13. Re:Different from the NSA by lgw · · Score: 1

      Why are states optimal? Is it because 50-200+ years ago, this patch of geography was chosen to be grouped together? How does this imply that all states have the resources necessary for their own road building?

      The federal government doesn't build roads (well, perhaps on Federal land). Roads are already built by the states using money that came from the states. The federal government hold the states hostage to all sorts of laws and unfunded mandates by threatening to withhold their withhold that money.

      So yeah, there actually is a group of anarchists willing to give up roadbuilding to get their way: the federal government.

      If there a need for country-wide minimal standards for roads, then let the states build the roads against that standard exactly like it works today. There's a way to solve the same problem with less centralized government power, so choose that way. It's not like abuse of the centralized power is hypothetical!

      Why would you want competition between states? Who benefits from something like that?

      If you think you know the best plan for something complicated before you start you're wrong. For any complex plan there are dozens of ideas that look good on paper, and some experts think each idea is best. As Feynman said: "one experiment is worth 1000 expert opinions". Let each state try the plan it thinks is best, you'll learn something. You may even learn that different regional cultures have different ideas about what "best" means. Different people have differing values, isn't that neat!

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    14. Re:Different from the NSA by kinthalas · · Score: 1

      I would like to know of the laws and unfunded mandates that the federal government uses over highway funding. The only one I could think of was the NMSL ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N... ), but that's been repealed for nearly 20 years now.

      I will agree that there are anarchists that are willing to give up roadbuilding, but I believe they are largely centered on the right wing of Congress, who refuse to fund infrastructure upgrades. I believe they claim that all government funding needs to be stopped to prevent some catastrophic debt burden, despite the projected debt not actually exploding ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F... ) and current interest rates for federal debt being at historically low levels ( http://finance.yahoo.com/echar...; ).

      On the second part, my response would be "So do research." Just take a portion of the money, build roads in different ways, and see which are the most durable/safest/cost effective. It'll be different in different places, so you probably have to do the research in multiple places to cover weather variations, but you just do it. Then, get this: you share that information with everyone. You don't need to have each state blindly try things.

      Competition is not the solution to all problems. You don't need to run a complex Monte Carlo test to figure out how to fit a line to some data. You can use math to figure that out. Similarly, you don't need to have everyone come up with their best ideas and experiment on actual things people use everyday. You can do research to figure that out beforehand.

    15. Re:Different from the NSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The grandparent poster said:

      I don't expect the government to be making ANY social economic decisions, informed or otherwise.

      I don't think it's at all unfair to take that as an absolute and all-encompassing statement of opposition to the government in a wide-ranging scope of endeavor, and not in any way that could be appropriately described as "some portion" of it. Not is it even limited to the federal government, as you express, but a pretty outright statement of complete opposition.

      But it's not at all amazing how you want us to ignore what somebody actually said while you can pretend to be attacking somebody else for coming up with a strawman.

      Also, if you can't understand how some of us don't find your solution to prefer the state government to be without objection, maybe you need to find out about some more misbehavior on the lower levels of government. Ain't none of it perfect, from the libertarian anarchists to the authoritarian controllers, there's plenty of legitimate objections to go around. But if you're so blind as to the potential flaws that could come up with your ideas that you create your own strawman (which after your own complaints about that in your post makes you a hypocrite), then perhaps there might be a flaw in your thinking that arises from that level of certainty.

      To put it another way, abuse of decentralized power is not hypothetical either. Sometimes such things do not solve problems, but actually make them worse, as nobody with good intentions actually does anything to stop the wrongs being done. Fear of misusing power is certainly the place of any moral actor, but the immoral actors will not respect that caution themselves, so deluding ourselves into paralyzed inaction is not an improvement.

    16. Re:Different from the NSA by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      the might not be optimal but they appear to be just right in size, much more so than the federal level superstate. They are big enough to enjoy economies of scale but not big enough to suffer from diseconomies of scale which affects the top level of the govt (more levels of wasteful bureaucracy, less acurate information about the situation on the ground, more delay in action, ...). Mismanagement of a program at the federal level can mean a waste of countless billions of dollars with next to no accountability. You have more than a snowball's chance in hell to affect your city and state govt, at the national level you are one of few hundred million nobodies and the Washington congresscritters are detached from reality, living in a bubble created by lobbyists.
      States are also much more likely to represent the values of the local populace. Pushing redneckish laws on SF hipsters doesn't sound like a brilliant idea, conversely progressive legislation sounds like an oppression to bible thumpers.

      Why would you want competition between states? Because you have ongoing 50 experiments at once and you can quickly see what works and what doesn't. Consider it a genetic algorithm having 50 paths with crossbreeding. With one-size-fits-all solutions you can only pray and hope for the best that the ruling class is smart enough to understand the issue and that it had your best interests in mind during the backroom deals. What they concoct is what you will get and there is no way out.

      Your road example is a good one - it shows one of the failures of the federal govt. Why do you think people in the US are so dependent on cars, oil, suffer from the urban sprawl and have next to no mass transit? Because the top-down approach to road building spraying federal dollars everywhere oversubsidized the car usage, making it artificially cheap to live in burbs in huge houses, have 3 cars and drive everywhere. Obviously it killed all other options except planes for long distance. There are so many roads that the country can't afford to pay for their maintenance.
      As you can see the federal govt can create an illusion it doesn't have to obey laws of economics, but that's not true. The problems it creates are not obvious at first sight but they are there and once you can't ignore them they are huge. At the state level without the magical printing press you have to evaluate what your needs are and what you can afford.

      Are the states perfect? Nope, but good luck pushing gay marriage or marijuana legalization from the federal level, purely top down. You'd wait much much longer if the people at the state level didn't touch the subject first.

    17. Re:Different from the NSA by kinthalas · · Score: 1

      I would like any evidence that the first paragraph is correct. State governments are not magically immune to the influence of lobbyists. See the governors of VA, NJ, (ex-)IL for examples of this. Corruption and mismanagement are problems, but claiming that the way to defeat government corruption is to break the government into so many pieces it'd be impossible to corrupt them all sounds too much like King Solomon's solution.

      As for local values, I would argue that allowing that to define laws is insanity. Are people citizens of the same country? If so, then they all should be dealt with identically, regardless of who they are, what they believe, or even more so, who their neighbors are and what they believe. Things like gay marriage seem to obviously fall into an equal-protection concept that personal religious beliefs shouldn't influence. Marijuana is different, in that the laws prohibiting it are based on questionable science from nearly a hundred years ago. Research the issue, determine the health risks, and then legalize/tax/whatever as necessary.

      On competition, what do you propose to do with states that find a bad solution? A state that must repair roads yearly because they don't work as planned, or a state that has terrible educational outcomes, or a state with persistent poverty. Are they to be doomed forever because of this failing? Do you point out that they should have done better fifty years ago, but you're sorry that you can't prop them up anymore? Are the citizens there to move to another state, further depressing the economic base and resources until the state is empty?

      There's no reason to "pray and hope" for a good outcome from some disconnected ruling class. You fund government agencies with tasks. "Figure out how to make better roads", "see if this plant really is dangerous to people", "put that man onto that moon, then bring him back so I can shake his hand". You then hire experts in the field to solve the tasks, and then they write up how to do it. Then, you fold that knowledge into the system. Finally, the trickiest bit of all: you don't stop. "Figure out how to make the roads better still", "see if that other plant is dangerous to people", "put that man onto that Mars, then bring him back so I can shake his hand". Things won't always work perfectly, but I can't possibly imagine how having a large entity spending money to solve problems is a bad idea.

      Urban sprawl is a product of many things, and having interstates that promoted easy travel to city cores from suburbs is part of that, but the benefits of interstates definitely outweigh the problems. Although urban planning could have had better leaders than Robert Moses, the concept of urban planning is not a problem.

      The government does have to obey economics, but the economics of the world's largest economy are not the same as the economics of your family, your city, or your state. Attempting to fit it with those economics is incorrect, and constrains the options unnecessarily. I also fail to see how non-obvious problems is something you should fear in this way. All choices have effects, and you can only try to minimize them based on the knowledge you have. Pushing the problem to the state level brings me back to my questions of how to deal with failures.

    18. Re:Different from the NSA by gumbi+west · · Score: 2

      Uh, if the company doesn't track your financial records, how will they send you the bill?

    19. Re:Different from the NSA by lgw · · Score: 1

      Right, right, because "the experts should decide, we can't trust the stupid people" is the key to democracy. No, wait, that's not right. ... is the key to the modern Left. Yup.

      Just like you can ship software with 0 bugs. Just like you can prove an airplane safe to fly without actually flying it. Just like any complex system can be tuned just right for everyone without actually trying it, all we need to do is let the experts figure out what's best, and then have a strong central authority dictate that to one and all! Corruption? Why, if there's a problem with corruption in a strong central government, we can fix it by giving that government even more power, that'll work for sure.

      Totalitarians always sing the same songs. All the worlds problems are caused by letting people think for themselves (and/or the right), and all those problems can be solved by additional power given to a central authority.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    20. Re:Different from the NSA by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      I would like any evidence that the first paragraph is correct. State governments are not magically immune to the influence of lobbyists. See the governors of VA, NJ, (ex-)IL for examples of this.

      They are not less immune but the damage they can do with their corruption is not counted in billions and the scope and return on investment much lower - i've read about ROI in the ballpark of 20,000% at the federal level. The more power in one hand, the more profitable is to buy said hand. Having everybody important conveniently in one place and being out of sight of average citizen sure helps.

      As for local values, I would argue that allowing that to define laws is insanity. Are people citizens of the same country? If so, then they all should be dealt with identically, regardless of who they are, what they believe, or even more so, who their neighbors are and what they believe.

      Why don't you believe in self determination and what's your take on the affirmative action then?
      The only way you can achieve something like that, with the absolute equality, is to you extract the lowest common denominator from all world views. There would be a problem though, because it would be something like the US constitution and the bill of rights, but without the reinterpretation nonsense.
      Universal agreement to more than that is impossible because different people weigh freedom, safety, convenience and what not differently and there is no way around it.
      Btw, shouldn't you strive for equal rights for all people? The superstate is as arbitrary as the state. Why does the federal govt have the right to segregate people to 'Muricans and these other dudes usually with dark skin who can be droned just because?
      And social issues aside, how are you going to apply your identical solutions to economic problems to places with varying levels of economic activity? Uniform minimum wage doesn't work for all states, it's either too low for SF, LA, NY or too high for the rural South or American Samoa.

      On competition, what do you propose to do with states that find a bad solution?

      On the lack of competition, what do you propose to do with the federal govt finding a bad solution? Oh right, nothing. And you most likely you wouldn't even know how to fix it, because you wouldn't have 30 convenient examples telling you how to do it right.
      Are you sure the ACA is going to pan out? I wouldn't be. And how do you feel about the NSA spying on the citizens? What are you going to do about it?

      There's no reason to "pray and hope" for a good outcome from some disconnected ruling class. You fund government agencies with tasks.

      So who decides what their task is, not to mention what the definition of 'is' is? Lawmakers do. Let's see...

      the Patriot Act?
      the NDAA?
      the NSA spying on citizens?
      the TSA molesting children at airports?
      No Child Left Behind?
      the SEC doing nothing to curb banksters?
      Monstanto owning their regulators?
      the FDA generating exorbitant costs to the pharma industry to the tune of billion dollars per trial?

      Yup, sounds like the federal govt is a neverending stream of successes. You might want to rethink if it's as simple as creating an agency with tasks.

    21. Re:Different from the NSA by kinthalas · · Score: 1

      Where did I say "we can't trust the stupid people"? Do you take a poll of your neighbors to see how to rewire your house, or do you call an electrician? You call an expert because they've studied the field, and know how it works. I don't see any way that this is "the modern left." It's common sense. If you have a problem about X, you find an X-ologist to tell you more about it. If you don't think this is the obvious way to do things, then I'm sorry, but you're simply wrong.

      A complex system can be sorted out to find a decent optimum. I'm not going to claim that the Hessian of the entire political and economic world is beautifully negative semidefinite, so there's a unique best solution. However, I will claim that there must be a better solution, because poverty exists, because not all children have satisfactory nutrition, because unemployment is high, and because I have eyes and can see the problems that exist. Therefore, if these issues were mitigated, then the system is in a better state. I claim that doing something that moves closer to that better state is better than not doing that thing. It seems morally obvious. What objection do you have to this? Is it simply that you may need to pay more in taxes than you do now? Is it that you've somehow lost some intangible concept of "freedom"?

      I cannot see that the current government is somehow a scheming bastion of corruption and totalitarianism. This is not Middle Earth, you are not Aragorn, The Government is not Sauron. Setting things up in such tones makes it impossible to have actual discussions on how to improve things.

      Is the government perfectly efficient? No. Because it's made of people, and people make mistakes.

    22. Re:Different from the NSA by porges · · Score: 1

      IIRC, when I refinanced I GAVE them my bank statements, so that's a different case.

    23. Re:Different from the NSA by kinthalas · · Score: 1

      Am I correct that your concern is the corruption of Congress, as they are the ones who write the laws? I'm trying to understand, and be sure you're not claiming that all government employees are corrupt. Since members of Congress are elected locally, I'm unclear how this would be helped. Campaign finance seems to be the most obvious place where such issues would take place. Would you agree that having an organized election system, where each candidate presents a set of views, and have that funded equally to ensure fairness would eliminate the appearance of corruption that exists now? Alternatively, do you believe that unrestricted campaigns would be better?

      I also don't see where you read me as being against self-determination. People are free to do what they want. That's the point of equality of opportunity. Affirmative action attempts to provide that on a racial basis, under the assumption that college acceptance is biased. That was clearly the case in the past, and has improved over time. Should it be permanent? Of course not, but where making a cereal commercial with an interracial couple causes outrage (as was the case last year) suggests that racism is still a problem.

      I will now gloss over the rest of that paragraph, as I can't see a common theme. Yes, human rights are universal. Yes, they should therefore be applied universally. I don't see where I claimed otherwise. Just because I support the current administration doesn't mean that they're without flaws.

      Continuing: research. Figure out the solution beforehand. The world is not a series of unforeseeable random attacks. You can figure out how things will work before you try them. It's convenient that you bring up the ACA, as this is an example of attempting to solve a problem (uninsured citizens) by doing something (everyone needs insurance now) and then offsetting problems (insurance companies get new members, but can no longer discriminate. Some people are too poor to afford insurance, so use the tax breaks and existing medicaid system to cover them at lower cost). It's already doing exactly as it was designed to do: get more coverage to more people. People no longer have to go without preventative treatment because they're afraid of what they might find. Isn't this a good thing?

      The NSA spying story is something where my actual response was, "didn't we already know this?" Is it ideal? No, but I also don't see this as the beginning of internment camps for everyone. Why? Because it's impractical. Step A: everyone goes into camps. Step B: ? Why? The government doesn't really benefit from that. The evil corporations don't benefit from that. Banksters don't benefit. So, if no one benefits (except some hypothetical God-King that has decreed this), then why assume it'll happen? What to do about it? Shut it down, and if it were a perfect world, send people to jail. Is this the greatest concern right now? Not when Congress wants to cut SNAP funding by $5e9. That will hurt people now. Although your concerns on the NSA are justified, they are not hurting people now, and do not justify hurting more people in the name of "freedom."

      For your final list, how do you fix that? Do you try to elect new members of Congress that are not beholden to external interests, and more interested in governing than voting 40+ times to stop a single program that might help people, or do you claim that the whole system is broken, and must be burned down to the ground and destroyed? When your car runs out of gas or gets a flat tire, do you push it off the road and set it ablaze? Besides, why not talk about government programs that work? Hurricane relief, the interstate road system, college grants, the head start program ( http://www.huffingtonpost.com/... ), NASA, Social Security, the TVA, NIH, etc.

    24. Re: Different from the NSA by kinthalas · · Score: 1

      I'll admit that the 21 is probably unsupportable. I'll also agree that legislating via route A instead of unconstitutional route B is sub-optimal. The question then becomes, "why is route A valid, but route B not?" I don't know that answer, because I'm not a constitutional lawyer.

      In any case, forcing all laws to be supported by some set of reproducible research would solve many problems. If this law doesn't improve outcomes in some fashion, it's not useful, and shouldn't be added. I guess "quality" is what I would hope the government would strive for.

    25. Re:Different from the NSA by cdwiegand · · Score: 1

      You must be confusing the US with Europe - while there are a few privacy laws, generally they are trumped by agreements and contracts between you and your bank, credit cards and merchants, that allow them to sell or share the data as they see fit with associates (which includes FICO, the IRS, Visa, etc..). In Europe you can sue if they don't actually have your permission, but here in the US you don't have an inherent right to privacy.

      --
      . Define sqrt(x) as something really evil like (x / rand()), and bury it deep. Watch your coworkers go nuts.
    26. Re:Different from the NSA by lgw · · Score: 1

      Where did I say "we can't trust the stupid people"? Do you take a poll of your neighbors to see how to rewire your house, or do you call an electrician? You call an expert because they've studied the field, and know how it works. I don't see any way that this is "the modern left." It's common sense. If you have a problem about X, you find an X-ologist to tell you more about it. If you don't think this is the obvious way to do things, then I'm sorry, but you're simply wrong.

      I agree with you completely for easy problems. In fact, that's a good definition of an easy problem: one for which any expert knows the answer, and every expert gives the same answer, and it's just a matter of the size of the check needed to get the work done. But every state and city will get the same answers from their local experts for such problems, no?

      Hard problems are different. They're not "well solved". Experts argue about what the best answer is, and often insist that those on the other side aren't actually experts at all - there's not even agreement as to who the experts are. Doesn't that sound like all the interesting problems in modern politics?

      Plus there are issues that are simply geographic in nature. What's the right amount of earthquake hardening to pass code? What's the highest winds a building should survive to pass code? How important is it to conserve water, and separately to limit water in storm sewers?

      I cannot see that the current government is somehow a scheming bastion of corruption and totalitarianism.

      Compared to what? Certainly there are worse governments. But the more powerful the government, the more corruption matters. This nation was founded on the idea that government shouldn't grow too powerful because we can't trust it. And corruption doesn't have to take the form of a glowing eye atop a tower - or even money pocketed by the boss - corruption simply means that projects don't get completed satisfactorily. Panama's government tried to maintain the Panama Canal with local companies and local supervision, and failed; the problem wasn't that hard, but there was too much corruption to get the job done. America's government tried to create a website to allow people to shop for health insurance, and failed; the problem wasn't that hard, but there was too much corruption to get the job done.

      Small organizations are more efficient than large at many tasks, that's hardly controversial. Some tasks can only be done by large organizations, or only done optimally. Solving each problem with a smaller organization where that works for that problem is a better plan than throwing one giant blob at everything.

      I think for most problems, the important role for a central authority is to provide standards. To incorporate "lessons learned" wherever experts do agree that problems have been well solved, and insist on that as a minimum. Do you need the government to grow all the food, or does the FDA work well enough for the government's role? Do you need all electrical work done by the government, or does the national electric code suffice?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  3. Biased Much? by rabtech · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In order to regulate credit card companies and banks, the CFPB needs to know what is happening with these financial products.

    It would appear that the banks' astroturf campaign is in full swing trying to get people riled up.

    --
    Natural != (nontoxic || beneficial)
    1. Re:Biased Much? by DarkOx · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      You know how you can get that information you take a god damned poll. You don't invade people's privacy without their knowing.

      This is the sort of thing that makes me wish the GOP luck in blocking Obama's appointments.

      'Would you object to getting permission from consumers, those people who you work for, before you collect and monitor their information?' Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., asked Cordray. 'That would make it impossible to get the data,' Cordray replied."

      Seriously, people who think like Cordray should be tar'ed and feathered and left to die in the street.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    2. Re:Biased Much? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In order to regulate credit card companies and banks, the CFPB needs to know what is happening with these financial products.

      And that requires 96 data points, some of which obviously have nothing to do with the financial products themselves, but rather uniquely identify the individuals who hold said financial products?

      My ass.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    3. Re:Biased Much? by Mitreya · · Score: 1

      In order to regulate credit card companies and banks, the CFPB needs to know what is happening with these financial products.

      You would think that perhaps "unique card-account identification reference number" could be omitted to try to anonymize the data?
      Possibly even convert the data values into sub-ranges (income 60K-70K, 70K-80K, etc.), if all you need is to find out "what is happening" with financial products.

    4. Re:Biased Much? by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      I think the "unique numbers" in this case are basically just acting like primary keys in a database. They can't actually use the credit card numbers, so they just set a PK for each account's information instead. Nothing sinister there at all.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    5. Re:Biased Much? by Tailhook · · Score: 2

      Right, so regulating banks requires abject surrender of all financial privacy.

      I'll keep that in mind the next time someone argues that defending against terrorists doesn't require PRISM and the TSA.

      Or maybe I'll just chalk up your silly shit to the double standards you indulge on behalf of your world view.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    6. Re:Biased Much? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      I think the "unique numbers" in this case are basically just acting like primary keys in a database. They can't actually use the credit card numbers, so they just set a PK for each account's information instead. Nothing sinister there at all.

      Do you know what all of the 96 data points they're mining are?

      If so, by all means, give us a link.

      If not, then you're blowing smoke.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    7. Re:Biased Much? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      You have already surrendered that privacy to the banks. If you don't let regulators have it too, exactly how effective do you think they will be?

      The only way to roll it back is to pass new laws that eliminate the Third Party Doctrine.

    8. Re:Biased Much? by sandytaru · · Score: 3, Informative

      Making a comment about how having a "unique identifier" for a data set is required to do anything with the data - that is, Database 101 - is blowing smoke? I can think of 96 data points pretty easily, none of which will require the person's name, SSN, or credit card number. Zip code, age, income level, interest rate, card level, total outstanding debt, number of other credit cards, years on credit history, credit card max, number of credit card increases, number of credit history inquiries, education level, total number of purchases, interest rate changes, total number of late payments, total amount of later fees, annual fees, bonus points available, bonus points earned, total number of cards issue, total number of fraud inquiries, total number of document fraud reimbursements amount of fraud reimbursements, total purchases, average number of purchases a month - and then break each of those things that are variables down by the last five years per card. Bam, you're at well over a hundred.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    9. Re:Biased Much? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "In order to regulate credit card companies and banks, the CFPB needs to know what is happening with these financial products."

      "Knowing what is happening with these... products" does not require monthly financial information on every adult in America.

      Of course the official said asking for permission would make it impossible to get the data. Nobody in their right minds would give permission.

    10. Re:Biased Much? by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      Why do you think the GOP would do any better?

    11. Re:Biased Much? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Right, so regulating banks requires abject surrender of all financial privacy.

      I know you're being sarcastic, but it doesn't.

      In fact, privacy is one of the things that gets regulated in Australia. Banks are not permitted to hand over information without a warrant and they certainly aren't permitted to share my personal information with anyone else (like advertisers). If the ATO (tax) or AQIS (customs) wants any information from my bank they need to ask me or get a warrant. If another department like DHS (Human Services AKA welfare) wants them they pretty much have no other option but to ask me (but they can refuse services if I refuse to provide the details). Your own bank is not even permitted to look at your purchases without your permission.

      Once another organisation is in possession of these details, they are subject to similar privacy laws preventing them from being shared and there are massive punishments for this law being broken (as in executives going to jail big).

      There is very little information available to potential creditors, mainly what is on your credit file (number of application, number of defaults) which leads to extremely long credit application forms. Personally I think this is a good thing as it discourages too much personal debt and gives you an idea and control over the amount of information a bank or creditor can collect on you.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    12. Re:Biased Much? by blade8086 · · Score: 1

      > This is the sort of thing that makes me wish the GOP luck in blocking Obama's appointments.

      Yes.. because they have such a Grand Old Track record on these kinds of things.. ha

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Bush%27s_second_term_as_President_of_the_United_States#National_security_and_presidential_power_controversies

    13. Re:Biased Much? by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      I can think of 96 data points pretty easily, none of which will require the person's name, SSN, or credit card number.

      I can too - I can also think of several data points that would allow an entity to uniquely identify a card holder.

      My point being, unless we get to see what these 96 data points are, we have no reason to trust that they aren't being used to uniquely identify us in a nefarious manner.

      Especially considering all that NSA-illegal-spying stuff that's recently come to light.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
  4. Fucking Feds. by anagama · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Everyone you know, everywhere you go, everything you say, everything you buy.

    Data like this is not about protecting us from terrorism, it is about setting up the US Federal Gov't as the largest terrorist organization in the world today, directly softly at its own citizens ... for the present.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    1. Re:Fucking Feds. by anagama · · Score: 1

      first post attempt typos:

      directly: directed

      and to clarify, while the power inherent in such vast data collection is only softly directed at US citizens in the present time, there is no other way this goes but toward a purely despotic control of the citizenry in the future.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    2. Re:Fucking Feds. by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Terrorists? Guess you missed the part about how CFPB is about "protecting" consumers

      FTFY.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    3. Re:Fucking Feds. by rogoshen1 · · Score: 2

      because that is the ONLY USE FOR THE DATA EVER. seriously guy, are you naive enough to think that a) the scope of the data usage won't change B) other government agencies won't have access to said data C) that once this level of data collection is swallowed without outrage, it won't either remain perpetually as the standard, or be expanded farther? (or is this a huge 'woosh'?)

    4. Re:Fucking Feds. by ls671 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Everyone you know, everywhere you go, everything you say, everything you buy.

      Sounds to me just like:

      Every breath you take
      And every move you make
      Every bond you break
      Every step you take
      I'll be watching you

      http://www.lyricsfreak.com/s/s...

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    5. Re:Fucking Feds. by DogDude · · Score: 1

      everything you buy.

      Speak for yourself. I use cash.

      --
      I don't respond to AC's.
    6. Re:Fucking Feds. by s.petry · · Score: 1

      haha, I thought the same. When reading the summary for TFA this one popped into my head.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    7. Re:Fucking Feds. by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Uh, yeah. Since Hoover ran amok with the FBI and did sort of what you think the USG does, data use in the USG is pretty tightly regulated both in terms of what data can be used for and how it can be shared across agencies. I'd bet that if you asked the people working with this data if they could share it with another agency (for any purpose) they'd tell you it would be criminal for them to do so.

  5. All that information that they are collecting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All that information that they are going to collect has been collected without our permission for decades by the credit bureaus. ChoicePoint and the other background check companies (private spy agencies) accumulate even more data.

    We are also having to put more information on the web - like LinkedIN - in order to get employment. (I was told by several companies that they do ALL their recruitment via LinkedIN. )

    Do you really think when you apply for that job online via the outsourced web/HR firm that your data is kept confidential?!

    Aside from protecting myself from petty criminals (like publishing my SSN and DOB), I have pretty resided that my information is freely available to government and corporate interests and there is not a goddamn thing I can do about it.

    It's big business to pimp our data so that they configure out how to sell us more shit and how much they can charge for their shit.

    My only hope is that the CFPB will use this data wisely and find bank mistakes in our favor and order them to correct it.

    1. Re:All that information that they are collecting. by Kasar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The difference between private companies gathering data to create files and profiles on people is that they lack the legal standing of government. They can't arrest anyone based on a suspicion of anything, even if that a person is a deadbeat, while the government doesn't need a warrant or any specific law violation under the NDAA to incarcerate a person indefinitely.

      Alternatively, tie the financial with the capture and collection of all electronic communications and interactions, and finding dirt on anyone who becomes a political opponent or a valuable blackmail target becomes easier for those with access.

      /tinfoil hat off

      --
      vi? Who's that?
    2. Re:All that information that they are collecting. by kimvette · · Score: 1

      You just described the Federal Reserve and any number of other Federal departments and agencies.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  6. Want privacy? by tsprig · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... become Amish.

    1. Re:Want privacy? by bob_super · · Score: 1

      I'm glad this is currently modded insightful rather than funny.
      I'm really calling for a Scary/Sad tag though...

    2. Re:Want privacy? by John.Banister · · Score: 1

      ... and then get them to shun you.

    3. Re:Want privacy? by hebertrich · · Score: 4, Insightful

      man .. the americans are so fu**** coming and going it's a wonder they do not take arms and revolt.
      sheep . little tiny babies with no balls to end this .they simply roll over and ask for more.

      pathetic
      America is pathetic beyond belief.

    4. Re:Want privacy? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      ... and then get them to shun you.

      It's like getting slapped with silence.

      - D. K. Schrute.

    5. Re:Want privacy? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I'm just going to guess that you're a male who isn't responsible for a family yet. You don't sound like someone who's balanced difficult moral trade-offs yet. Here's my take on it:

      For the most part, a given region doesn't produce enough food, medicine, or fuel for itself.

      If we revolted, there would be a major disruption in our commerce and transportation networks. Without fuel, we'd run out of electricity, and then not have clean water nor proper sewage disposal. We'd possibly see dysentery and malnutrition in just months. The first winter would be as deadly as what the Pilgrims experienced. There would be mass attempted exodus, but we might find Canada and/or Mexico forcibly stopping us from entering their countries. My wife, who's a Type 1 diabetic, would probably get very sick and perhaps die form the disruption in insulin supply.

      I think that's a pretty big price to pay in exchange for heightened privacy. I'm sure the calculation would change if our government became more authoritarian, but that hasn't clearly happened yet.

    6. Re:Want privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      People like you would have had us never split off from Britain....

      Grow some balls. Gotta pay to play.

    7. Re:Want privacy? by Dr.+Zim · · Score: 2

      Says the AC :) At least Doofus had the balls to post with a name.

      --
      (name withheld by request)
    8. Re:Want privacy? by hebertrich · · Score: 1

      WRONG ...married with kids happily living outside the states. :P

    9. Re:Want privacy? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the spy drones are keeping tabs on them too. :-P

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  7. It's not private... by laird · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While it's creepy, in the US your credit card transaction is not private - it's collected by credit card companies and massively data mined (and has been for decades) for direct marketing, credit scoring, etc., used by companies to sell products to consumers and to drive them as deeply as possible into debt.

    The only "news" here is that the government is data mining to benefit consumers rather than to exploit them. That's clearly crossing the line.

    1. Re:It's not private... by CanHasDIY · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The only "news" here is that the government is data mining to benefit consumers rather than to exploit them. That's clearly crossing the line.

      Right; because as we all know, if the US government says they're doing something for Reason X, we should totally take their word for it. It's not like they have whole departments convinced that their job is to lie to the American People, right?

      Reminds me of the only thing Reagan said I ever agreed with: "The most frightening words in the English language are, 'I'm from the government, and I'm here to help.'"

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    2. Re:It's not private... by CanHasDIY · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes because when the government collects census data it's for evil!

      So.. do you not know the difference between "voluntary" and "compulsory"?

      Surely you're not so dense as to fail to recognize the difference between voluntary trade with a company that can't harm your liberty, and compulsory data-mining from a government that can?

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    3. Re:It's not private... by PraiseBob · · Score: 2

      That's it exactly. Not only is this data not private, it has never been private. It has always been sold between companies, and is the entire basis for a multi-billion dollar industry. The CFPB is simply purchasing this information at the market price, just like hundreds of other companies do on a routine basis. As the joke goes, capitalists will sell the rope to hang themselves.

      You can bet the NSA collects this exact same information. The NSA collects this information to conduct drone strikes, and find citizens to murder. The CFBP wants to use this information to regulate banks. Yet, this congressman doesn't talk about the NSA. Does it surprise anyone at all, that banking & finance sectors contribute heavily to his wallet? http://www.opensecrets.org/pol...

      This is another politican who has been bought and paid for, and is fighting against the best interests of the people he supposedly represents.

    4. Re:It's not private... by mcl630 · · Score: 1

      who allow Google, Facebook, Amazon, Canonical, and others to data mine the shit out of them.

      The key word there is allow. Google, et al don't collect data in secret, they have privacy policies, and using their services is completely optional. The government is doing this in secret, without your permission with no opt-in or opt-out, with nothing akin to a privacy policy, and by their own admission they cannot secure the data.

    5. Re:It's not private... by wasteoid · · Score: 1

      How about from Reagan's inaugural address: "In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem."

    6. Re:It's not private... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Although TFA is a little scarce on details, it sounds like the CFPB is just obtaining the data the way any other company can...by buying it. So if you don't want the government to have that data, don't give it to businesses who will sell it to anyone.

    7. Re:It's not private... by Rockoon · · Score: 2

      There is a reason that Reagan won by complete landslides in both elections, and it wasnt his geriatric charisma. Its because people knew that his straight talk was true.

      However, back then television channels like PBS were running programs like Milton Friedmans "Free to Choose" which showcased some of the disasters of progressivism (such as federal housing projects, aka "concentrated poverty") as well as some of the shining successes of capitalism (such as Hong Kong.) The only place you will find that sort of freedom coverage now is on the Internet.

      For the record, in 1980 Reagan took 489 out of 538 electoral votes and carried 44 of the 50 States. Then in 1984 Reagan took 525 out of 538 electoral votes and carried 49 of the 50 States. Unlike recent presidents, Reagan grew in popularity as time went on.

      I doubt we will ever see another president like Reagan in my lifetime.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    8. Re:It's not private... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I doubt we will ever see another president like Reagan in my lifetime.

      I sure hope so, and I wish you a long life if you can guarantee it.

    9. Re:It's not private... by langelgjm · · Score: 1

      You can bet the NSA collects this exact same information.

      This. I'm glad someone else pointed it out.

      The critical difference that this bloviating idiot of a Representative purposely fails to highlight is that we're having an open debate about whether and what the CFPB should collect.

      Whereas the NSA has been "collecting" (if by collecting, we mean sending NSLs forcing companies to turn over their entire databases, or provide access to the NSA on an ongoing basis without telling anyone, or if they don't comply, simply stealing the information) credit records, bank records, cell phone records complete with geolocation information, etc. for years.

      --
      "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    10. Re:It's not private... by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      They're buying it from a company which collects the information from the credit card issuers. You cannot opt out of your credit card information being collected by this third party. You cannot choose which entities can buy your information from this third party company. There's no opt-out equivalency - you've opted in to corporate collection by signing up for a credit card, and the government is just buying information the same way any other entity could given the impetus.

    11. Re:It's not private... by laird · · Score: 1

      "The government is doing this in secret, without your permission with no opt-in or opt-out, with nothing akin to a privacy policy, and by their own admission they cannot secure the data"

      Not even remotely true. Read the article. The government is buying exactly the same data from the credit companies that they'll sell anyone willing to pay. You agreed to let the banks and credit card companies sell your data to anyone they like, by using bank accounts and credit cards. The government isn't doing anything in secret - they disclosed that they planned to buy the data before they did so. Note that the tend of thousands of companies buying the same data and using it to do direct marketing, credit scoring, etc., don't disclose that, while the government did.

  8. Oh look.... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Republicans have discovered another way to shut down the government: just prevent it from collecting any data required to do its job.

    Regulatory agency needs to collect data on credit cards to determine whether credit card providers are up to illegal shenanigans, or what kind of regulations are too little, just right, or overkill? Tell them that they're like the NSA, need to be shut down and the bureaucrats strung up high.

    I'm wondering when they will apply this to healthcare and the IRS. What better way from preventing them from operating than to deny them access to any data? Bonuspoint: Republicans get to point out how ineffective the Federal Government is, and how it should all just be dismantled.

    No promise is more self-fulfilling than that of a government official who insists that government is bad. It's the only position where doing a horrible job actually gets you a promotion. And I don't mean that in the cynical, "the-sheep-don't-know-who-they're-voting" way, I mean that quite literally: some Republicans go into office to demonstrate how bad government is, do all kinds of things that destroys the ability of the government to do anything (hello government shutdown...), and then go back to their constituents and say "See how bad government is? I was right! Vote for me!"

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    1. Re:Oh look.... by Mitreya · · Score: 1

      Republicans have discovered another way to shut down the government: just prevent it from collecting any data required to do its job.

      Regulatory agency needs to collect data on credit cards to determine whether credit card providers are up to illegal shenanigans, or what kind of regulations are too little, just right, or overkill?

      I don't think so.
      They (CFPB) should anonymize the damn data, unless they are required to have trace-able unique identifiers and exact amounts to do their job. Is their job to survey the credit card provider performance or to collect enough data to later send individualized (get out of debt) offers to cardholders?

  9. Give me a break by langelgjm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These two things are nothing alike. This sounds like a Republican attempt to induce some guilt by association for the CFPB, which they hate so much.

    First, there's the fact that we're hearing about this in a Congressional hearing directly from agency personnel, with numerous details. As opposed to having agency personnel lie directly to Congress, and that only after a leak.

    Second, why do we think the CFPB is collecting this information? Um, probably to see if credit card and mortgage companies are engaging in predatory lending practices, or abiding by regulations, or to better understand consumer financial behavior in the U.S. You know, things within their mandate. As opposed to the NSA, which has no business dealing with domestic intelligence.

    Now there are legitimate concerns about the quality of anonymization, why they can't use a sampling technique, who the contractor is, and what federal agencies should have access to the data. Note that these are everyday issues that the U.S. Census Bureau and the IRS deal with all the time.

    Not surprising to see this coming from the Washington Examiner, which if you don't know, is DC's right-leaning daily.

    --
    "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    1. Re:Give me a break by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      The CFPB was created by a law written by Christopher "Countrywide Mortgage" Dodd and Barney "Fannie Mae" Frank, two powerful politicians who were telling us that everything was fine with the banks' real estate practices right up until the bubble burst, while collecting large sums of money from those banks. Yeah, this is all about protecting the consumers. /s

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  10. Do my taxes for me, then by Kevoco · · Score: 2

    If the govt insists on crawling up my ass with a microscope, then they should have the common decency to emerge with a completed IRS Form 1040

    1. Re:Do my taxes for me, then by jratcliffe · · Score: 2

      They would. The IRS would like to shift to a model where they send you your return (based on the info they have), and you either say "cool," or "nope, not right, here's my tax return." For a very large portion of Americans, who just generate wage and interest income, and don't itemize deductions, it would be much less hassle, reduce errors, etc.

      BUT...Intuit and H&R Block have lobbied against it tooth and nail, for obvious reasons.

    2. Re:Do my taxes for me, then by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      Do you really think it's a hassle to fill out a 1040-EZ?

      The problem with this approach is because it discourages people taking deductions to which they are entitled, because there is a not-so-subtle coercion to avoid "correcting" big brother.

    3. Re:Do my taxes for me, then by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Can you think of a situation where a store lowering the price of a product can increase revenue and profit? Yeah? Now tell me why the last paragraph in you post makes no sense.

  11. 2014, not 1984 by BoRegardless · · Score: 1

    But the government has finally figured out how to track and eventually control everyone. Just not fully implemented.

  12. Alternate Headline by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    "Pro-Capital GOP uses NSA Leaks as New Excuse to Attack Consumer Protection Agency They Never Liked."

  13. The Basic Problem Is by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Informative

    That YOU HAVE NO EXPECTATION OF PRIVACY when you disclose data to third parties.

    It's a basic characteristic of the current legal system. It lets the post office accumulate files of the outside of every envelope that passes through their system, it allows the NSA to search metadata associated with every phone call and tcp/ip packet that passes over the internet, and it allows collection of this sort of information without any oversight from the courts.

    It's called the Third Party Doctrine.

    Since modern systems never forget, it means technology has handed government vastly greater surveillance powers.

    The only way to change it is to get laws changed. In some cases, like health care records there are laws that prohibit this. BUT not in general.

  14. Easy to get a lot of cards by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Five cards per person sounds about right.

    You usually get a card or two while in college, and then as you move on you get other cards you use more. But there's no need to cancel the old cards, which you can keep for an emergency.

    And there are cards for different uses - some cards I use for international purchases as they do not charge a conversion fee, but I don't use them the rest of the time.

    Some cards also get you rewards for different things depending on the purchase made.

    As long you carry no debt it doesn't hurt to have a lot of credit cards, and just owning and lightly using credit cards gives you a good credit history.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  15. No. You give *me* a break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Your post sounds like a Democratic attempt to whitewash an overweening government performing activities the average citizen probably would not approve of.

    It's these very kinds of activities - of which you seem quite happy with - that chip away at freedom bit by bit.

    But when you're a statist who thinks a huge government is great thing that can "solve problems", you really don't care that for a government to get the power to solve problems it has to take resources and freedom away from its citizens.

  16. Define "not private" by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While it's creepy, in the US your credit card transaction is not private

    Are you saying, given a name I could arbitrarily pull up credit transactions for that person?

    I do not think so. The fact that I cannot means that data is private.

    Now credit card company can share that data with whoever it likes - in private - so long as I agree to that, which we all do in credit card agreements. But just because there is a subset of people who can see it, does not mean it is not private...

    Nor does it mean that a federal agency should be able to see transaction by transaction history for every single person in the U.S. They could do the job they need to with a much broader and filtered overview of data.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Define "not private" by Guppy06 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Are you saying, given a name I could arbitrarily pull up credit transactions for that person?

      How do you think credit reporting bureaus get their information? Have you never gotten a "pre-approved" offer of credit?

      I do not think so. The fact that I cannot means that data is private.

      It's not private, it's profitable. The only laughable privacy Americans have with respect to credit cards is what little Congress has granted to shut up the few Americans who've noticed.

      Why do you think the credit card issuers themselves are collecting and storing all this information to begin with?

      Now credit card company can share that data with whoever it likes - in private - so long as I agree to that, which we all do in credit card agreements. But just because there is a subset of people who can see it, does not mean it is not private...

      If you care to read that agreement carefully, you'll note that your bank has exclusive say over who it can or won't share that information with, and can change the terms (if they were to ever get in the way) with little or no notice to you. It's nothing but "We promise to sell everything only to the highest bidder."

      And what are you going to do if they even do violate their own terms? Press your case in the mandatory individual arbitration you "agreed" to?

      They could do the job they need to with a much broader and filtered overview of data.

      And who sets up the filters, the very banks the CFPB is supposed to be policing?

    2. Re:Define "not private" by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      How do you think credit reporting bureaus get their information? Have you never gotten a "pre-approved" offer of credit?

      I know exactly how and what they get, and it IS NOT line my line transaction data.

      Yes your credit limit, current outstanding debt and so on is essentially public. NOT your transactions.

      It's nothing but "We promise to sell everything only to the highest bidder."

      Yes, exactly what I said. Still private.

      And who sets up the filters

      Presumably they would be well defined by the government.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    3. Re:Define "not private" by DeathToThePatriarchy · · Score: 1

      It is not private in the sense that only you and the entity with which you are doing business knows the information, but it is also not public. It is protected (in theory, at least). The credit reporting companies get the information because they have a contract with the credit card issuers to report your balance and payment information. Again, theoretically, this is to your benefit, since it gives you a credit history that can be depended on and checked. The trouble is that these companies can be kind of skeevy. I am not certain how I feel about that agency collecting detailed information on individuals. There are ways to de-identify the data and still keep the details separate (that is, not aggregated) and useful.

    4. Re:Define "not private" by laird · · Score: 1

      The CFPB is buying exactly the same data, exactly the same way, as anyone else can. If you don't like the idea that the government can get this data, you should be horrified that anyone else can do the same, and without any oversight.

    5. Re:Define "not private" by laird · · Score: 1

      The CFPB isn't getting line transaction data, just the essentially public credit limit and outstanding debt. Same as anyone who can buy the same data.

  17. Re:So. Better to beg forgiveness. by mcl630 · · Score: 1

    I didn't really see anything I'd call "apologetic" in this particular article.

  18. Conservative Trolls Are Taking Over Slashdot by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 3, Informative

    The first two stories on the front page of Slashdot are based on articles from conservative troll publications, the Washington Examiner and the Daily Mail.

    It's really getting ridiculous around here.

    1. Re:Conservative Trolls Are Taking Over Slashdot by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      It's really disturbing how an idealogical conformity is expected and anything out of that narrow range is immediately slapped with a label so it can be safely discarded without examination. Remember kids, don't disagree with the ruling party!

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  19. Why we Americans would object by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    1. Because it's unreasonable search.

    2. Because it's unreasonable seizure.

    3. Because it's none of your damned business.

    4. Because we have an inherent right to privacy.

    5. See 1. Lather. Rinse. Repeat. Do not shred the Constitution.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:Why we Americans would object by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      This is not seizure, since nothing is seized. It isn't even search. The Fourth Amendment guarantees that our papers are secure, not that any information about us is. Once somebody else knows something about us, there is no Constitutional reason we should control that.

      Since the credit card system is national in scope, regulation is quite clearly the responsibility of the Federal government, under the Constitution. Nor are the Feds doing anything unConstitutional, let alone shredding the Constitution. (As far as this program goes, anyway. I do believe that the Feds violate the Constitution with some other programs.)

      This is a problem, but it's not a problem that can be addressed by referring to the Constitution, which has nothing against it. Don't waste time and energy trying to make irrelevant protests.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  20. The proper word is surveillance by Arker · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You are right, spying is not the best word. This is untargetted mass surveillance. "Spying" implies something more targetted.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  21. Time for some massvie SQL injection attacks by gabrieltss · · Score: 1

    Seems maybe we should be finding ways to make some massive SQL injections attacks on these massive databases with some simple "drop table" or "drop database" SQL injections. Time to take back our 4th amendment!

    --
    The Truth is a Virus!!!
  22. Emo Philips by ilsaloving · · Score: 2

    'Would you object to getting permission from consumers, those people who you work for, before you collect and monitor their information?' Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., asked Cordray. 'That would make it impossible to get the data,' Cordray replied."

    He could have quoted Emo Philips...

    "When I was a kid I used to pray every night for a new bicycle. Then I realised that the Lord doesn't work that way so I stole one and asked Him to forgive me."

  23. Well You Know... by Greyfox · · Score: 1

    You never know when your agency might be declared illegal and have to go rogue. If that happens you're going to need a fast source of funding. So it kind of makes sense if you think about it...

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  24. Another reason to fire up the shredder by schivvers · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You are not required to carry a credit card. I am currently working on achieving a FICO score of 0. Life can and will go on without debt for me. Yes, I can get a mortgage without a FICO score...it requires manual underwriting, go to a smallish bank and you can do it. meh...another reason do remove myself from that plastic run economy.

    --
    Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well-preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally wo
    1. Re:Another reason to fire up the shredder by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Don't be surprised if banking regs make that impossible at some point. You know, to protect you from being abused by your bank.

    2. Re:Another reason to fire up the shredder by schivvers · · Score: 1

      actually the rate i have received is the same as the national average.

      --
      Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well-preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally wo
  25. We need to be able to opt out of any and all by ralphaostrander · · Score: 1

    Credit reporting agency's. I never gave them permission to make money on me. You want to know how much I owe if I am late try fucking asking me.

  26. Huh by koan · · Score: 1

    I only have one, with a small limit (and no balance) as I told them I would cut it up if they auto-raised the limit, and I'm debt free.
    So does that make me the focus or get me passed by?

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  27. Oy. by Shoten · · Score: 1

    Everyone seems to be ignoring the most important thing: WHY. The CFPB is a fairly new and rather aggressive consumer protection agency. They are seeking patterns of abuse by the credit industry, particularly around the practice of deliberately depressing FICO scores for a band of consumers with less-than-stellar credit risk but also not-the-end-of-the-world credit risk. This group is also known as the middle class. To do this, statistical information is needed about the FICO scores and credit history of the lower, middle, and upper class. How else will they be able to discern, describe and prove such a thing?

    Stop falling for the PR plant, everyone.

    --

    For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice.
    1. Re:Oy. by phmadore · · Score: 1

      How about a source on this. I'm suspicious but intrigued. I can see the Republicans building a whole new pro-privacy bandwagon, but I also don't see how this is a constitutional approach to the problem you've outlined.

  28. Holy shit by phmadore · · Score: 1

    Your financial records can only be sealed from these assholes if you have more money than they do, I guess, like the Federal Reserve's debts are sealed even from Congress, did you know that? It is suspected by many that they owe undisclosed amounts to places like Iran, Syria, and so forth.

  29. let's reverse this by stenvar · · Score: 1

    The federal government has now created massive programs to mine your financial records to protect you from financial abuse and to obtain lots of medical records and information about you in order to make sure that you're properly insured but don't impose too high costs on the system, In addition, in order to earn a living, you now need to get permission from the federal government to keep illegals from taking away "US jobs" and make the unions happy. And the NSA is tracking and recording everybody at will to protect us from terrorism.

    In a few short years, the US has turned from a nation with one of the least intrusive federal governments into a nightmare surveillance state. I think Obama's and the progressives' intent really is to help the American people, they are simply misguided. Their basic view seems to be that most people are so stupid that they can only survive if the federal government helps them with everything. Let's hope that people will start to realize that we are going down the wrong path, and let's hope that we can reverse this over the next few elections.

  30. IRS Data Mining Catches Working Poor by rlh100 · · Score: 1

    In the past year or two the IRS has manged to organize their data mining capabilities into a "useful" automatic auditing tool. The IRS is cross checking tax returns with "third party information". Bank records and soon credit card transactions.

    The program was supposed to catch the wealthy tax cheats hiding their money and collect hundreds of billions of tax revenue. It turns out that what these robo-audits do best is catching poor people who try to claim the Earned Income Tax Credit and have some un-reported income on the side, only collecting a couple of billion.

    People are complaining about what the NSA could do with the data they collect. This article is about what the CFPB might do. I am more concerned about what the IRS is actually doing with their data mining. Catching the people who have the most to loose and the least chance of hiding their tracks. The working poor.

    The IRS data mining is an actual example of how data mining by the government can backfire. Rather than catching wealthy tax cheats hiding their millions, it caches poor people.

    Rather than focusing on "maybes" and "what ifs" of the NSA and the CFPB. Shouldn't we be more concerned about what the IRS is currently doing? Effectively targeting the working poor.

    BTW, do you have an eBay business that earns you a couple of thou a year? Expect to pay income tax on it in the next couple of years.

    1. Re:IRS Data Mining Catches Working Poor by speedlaw · · Score: 1

      The last time I walked into a bricks and mortar bank, I learned that the Feds will want ID if you make a cash deposit, starting next year. True ?

  31. Re:No. You give *me* a break by blackraven14250 · · Score: 2

    I don't think you know what "statist" means - if you believe the government should be involved in any single one of having fire and police departments, building roads, health inspections, or anything else a government does that's widely considered an acceptable action for government, you can be called a "statist". Statist is an extraordinarily broad term, which you seem to not comprehend.

  32. The data by LookIntoTheFuture · · Score: 1

    OK. So they have data on us. People need access to this data to provide the service. The problem is that the more people that have access to this data, and the more servers and devices it sits on (with unknown security plans keeping it "safe") the more likely it will fall into the wrong hands. THAT is the issue. The fewer places this data is stored, the better off we are.

    --
    Brave Sir Robin ran away. ("No!") Bravely ran away away. ("I didn't!")
  33. Re:"Impossible" by speedlaw · · Score: 1

    "Inconceivable !" I do not believe that word means what you think it means.... FTFY

  34. Use cash by katorga · · Score: 1

    Time to use cash. This is where this is heading...you or the person who stole your CC info buys a pack of cigarettes, and a few months later you get a nasty 40% penalty on your Obamacare premium. You buy some artisan, unpasteurized yogurt with your card and an FDA swat team raids your house, taser's your girlfriend, shoots your dog and stomps on your parakeet. After 10 years of buying books on Amazon, you finally hit the magic combination and the NSA deems you a terrorist, and your new girlfriend, dog and parakeet suffer the consequences.

  35. Re:No. You give *me* a break by phmadore · · Score: 1

    But if are not a statist but you understand the monumental task of fully dismantling a government of the Fed's size, you make compromises. You pay your taxes, you do what you have to do in order to survive. This doesn't mean you actually believe this is the best way to run a society, you simply accept that it is the prevailing way. crimethinc.com has a lot more on this than I personally do.

  36. Re:No. You give *me* a break by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

    The vast majority of people don't disagree with the concept of a state-run fire department, or police department, which is what I was getting at. While you, and a few others, might agree with the concept of anarchy, it's not that "[people] simple accept that it is the prevailing way", it's that people by and large don't have a fundamental disagreement with these institutions.

  37. Re:No. You give *me* a break by phmadore · · Score: 1

    Or they are raised to believe that these are the only possible institutions, the only way to run things, and do not sufficiently question reality as adults to have a higher, more intricate understanding of their surroundings.

  38. I was just doing my job. by ralphaostrander · · Score: 1

    When I put the Jews on the train.