An Invasion of Privacy

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Lifestyle

One morning a few weeks ago, I woke up to a series of curious emails in my inbox. One after the other – Amazon, Venmo, Paypal, Netflix, . . . No, I had not authorized a change in my password on any of these accounts in my sleep. But somehow, each had been changed. I suddenly had strange email addresses attached to all of my accounts – and I was locked out of all of them.


For the next day or so, it kept happening. Less important platforms – Spotify access does not really change my world – and of course, I was on to the scam now so for the most part I was able to get ahead of the changes and lock my own accounts. And the $2,000 unauthorized charge to my checking account was promptly reversed by our bank.


I am not sure what the answer is here. The very nice police officer to whom I tried to report this theft quickly assured me that because this was so common, there was really nothing to do.


Common or not, I did not enjoy this experience one bit. More than a little creepy.

Comments

Rona Gura

As we discussed this happened to us about two years ago. Incredibly inconvenient because of all the work involved to rectify it and to monitor it afterwards. And also feels like a horrible invasion of privacy.
Daniel Schwartz

Never fun when you have been hacked or invaded. I had some misc charges to my credit card a few months back. The card company notified me right away to verify. Someone charge something in San Francisco, so I had to get a new card, and the pursuing of changing the change card # in all accounts that where attached to it. Such the price we pay for flexibility.

Submitted by MarilynGenoa on Tue, 05/12/2020 - 00:49

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Marilyn Genoa

I am so glad you were able to resolve --- very upsetting, not just an invasion of privacy, it leaves you feeling vulnerable, angry, with a loss of control. I guess on top of all else bombarding us these days we need to check accounts continuously.
Rick Raymond

It is such an invasion, as well as exasperating to un-wind. I am dumbfounded still, some may say naively, trying to understand the mindset of those who take on hurting others to satisfy their own sense of well-being. I had once a reported $300 charge to a Starbucks 500 miles away. My daughter, after telling her the story, responded that for what she spends in Starbucks her credit card company would have known it was her charge.

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