Are my credit-card using peeps paying attention?So P 80 has settled with Maryland, no sales at all in state and they must submit a list of all sales. oh and pay a fine of $1mill.
Are my credit-card using peeps paying attention?So P 80 has settled with Maryland, no sales at all in state and they must submit a list of all sales. oh and pay a fine of $1mill.
There's no other practical way to buy them, eh? Unless you have a local dealer where you can pay cash and walk out with it. I've never seen P80 frames available at any brick & mortar local store.Are my credit-card using peeps paying attention?
There's no other practical way to buy them, eh? Unless you have a local dealer where you can pay cash and walk out with it. I've never seen P80 frames available at any brick & mortar local store.
I don't think anyone here (using credit cards for purchases) suffers under any delusion that their purchases are truly private or guaranteed against unconstitutional seizure.Look, I'm just the messenger here.
Call your credit card company once a year and tell them you lost the card. You get a new number. That doesn't make it impossible to track or trace your buying habits. But it does make it harder. If they are querying your individual sales records (which they are not unless you are a suspect of a crime) they start with gun related sales, sorted by number. They don't go by name because a lot of people have the same name.I don't think anyone here (using credit cards for purchases) suffers under any delusion that their purchases are truly private or guaranteed against unconstitutional seizure.
But there is no other practical way to procure certain products for most of us. So, we take that risk, eh? But it's not because we're not "paying attention."
LOL! No need to do that. Mine get cancelled due to fraud about twice a year ever since they've gone to the "more secure" (LOL!) chip cards.Call your credit card company once a year and tell them you lost the card. You get a new number.
Some people are just lucky that way!LOL! No need to do that. Mine get cancelled due to fraud about twice a year ever since they've gone to the "more secure" (LOL!) chip cards.
It's a giant pain in the ass. I never had that problem until they added "security" to the cards. The chip cards are bullshit. Seriously. If anything, they are LESS secure. RFID chips can be scanned easily, even from a distance.Some people are just lucky that way!![]()
RFID cards use one-time codes to complete each transaction. Every time you use your RFID card, a new code is created. That makes it more difficult for your information to be compromised. Somebody snarfing your RFID would literally need to be up your ass to capture a code and it would be utterly useless unless they used the random code they grabbed on the same card reader within minutes. EMV cards are similar and usually require a pin, so you have the added security of two factor authentication.It's a giant pain in the ass. I never had that problem until they added "security" to the cards. The chip cards are bullshit. Seriously. If anything, they are LESS secure. RFID chips can be scanned easily, even from a distance.
This is not true.... at all.RFID cards use one-time codes to complete each transaction. Every time you use your RFID card, a new code is created. That makes it more difficult for your information to be compromised. Somebody snarfing your RFID would literally need to be up your ass to capture a code and it would be utterly useless unless they used the random code they grabbed on the same card reader within minutes or it would be useless.
Those blocking shields are essentially Faraday cages and do work but really don't offer much protection for the reasons I mentioned. The thief has a couple of minutes to use the one time code captured thru the air on the reader closest to the card at that moment - or it's worthless.This is not true.... at all.
Your "chip" cards can be scanned remotely. Ask me how I know. My "shielded" wallet did not work. Now I've got the RFID / NFC blocking cards as a "sandwich" around my cards in my wallet. I don't know if they really work. But I'm trying to do whatever I can.
Without a doubt, the new chip cards are FAR worse, security-wise, than the old cards. And my MULTIPLE experiences (since the new chip cards) proves it.
Don't 12 year Olds need to use their parent's credit card? When I was a child, I literally had to ask to buy any toy on the internet. Those 12 year Olds should have been taught gun safety from the age they played with plastic guns.Without a political 180 I think the days of mail order gun kits any 12 year old with a Dremel can do in under an hour may rightfully be over. These things have become a plague in schools and on the streets.
They're literally participation trophy "builds". Personally Manufactured Firearms were never an issue when it required tools and actual skill to make a firearm. Once the router AR's and Dremel Glocks hit the market it was a matter of time before they would become a public menace. At least my shop teacher when he realized that I was making Mac 10's marched me over to the band saw and made me cut them up. If these Poly80's had been available I probably would have been making them in Jr High School with nobody noticing.
When I was a child, there was no public internet. Only an ARPAnet.Don't 12 year Olds need to use their parent's credit card? When I was a child, I literally had to ask to buy any toy on the internet. Those 12 year Olds should have been taught gun safety from the age they played with plastic guns.
Simply put, its stupid parent that are the issue. Good that kids have guns. Life skills. It's bad when you don't teach them how to have discipline.
If I would have asked for such a thing they would have found enough work for me to do to shut me up for over a year…and I already had enough chores. And started my own yard business at age 13.When I was a child, there was no public internet. Only an ARPAnet.
If I asked to use my parents BankAmeriCard, I would be sucking on a bar of LifeBuoy just for thinking I was entitled to such a thing.
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Don’t believe the hype.Those blocking shields are essentially Faraday cages and do work but really don't offer much protection for the reasons I mentioned. The thief has a couple of minutes to use the one time code captured thru the air on the reader closest to the card at that moment - or it's worthless.
One (albeit former) exception is RFID chips on passports. Initially, you could snarf someones name and other PII if you were close enough to the passport AND the reader, going unnoticed - which is very unlikely in an airport security line. The 52 bit encryption was not hard to compromise. That was fixed years ago. Ask me how I know. Answer: I worked for the State Department and dealt with embassy security. They also are the gov't agency who issues passports.
RFID credit cards function at 13 MHz. The reader has to be within a foot. And most cards wont transmit anything unless they are physically in the reader. If not, as in cards that do proximity, the data is encrypted. RFID ID badges employers use for building security are easier to skim. They operate at 128 KHz. Since 2020, chip enabled drivers licenses and passports operate at ultra high frequency - 860-960 MHz.
Nearly all credit card chips are not fully RFID-enabled. To summarize... Today’s chip-embedded credit cards don’t actually transmit any useful information that could be captured without inserting the card in a reader. Contactless, proximity credit cards on the other hand do, but every transmission is encrypted. Capturing that data is possible if you are within a few inches of the reader but it's hopelessly scrambled. RFID skimming is mostly myth. It’s far easier and faster for thieves to steal huge quantities of credit card numbers and identities through Internet scams or by simply buying the information on the so-called dark web.
#1 location credit card numbers are purloined besides online? Bars and Strip clubs.
RFID credit cards function at 13 MHz. The reader has to be within a foot. And most cards wont transmit anything unless they are physically in the reader. If not, as in cards that do proximity, the data is encrypted.
Same article: "And while there hasn’t yet been a recorded case of RFID fraud..." It has not happened. The article contradicts itself. Those chip cards were in Europe five years before the US. Not one documented case of credit card RFID skimming anywhere or any time in the past decade. This is internet myth. The defense rests and petitions the judge for dismissal for lack of evidence.View attachment 18036
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Webroot Blog
www.webroot.com
And I'm pretty sure that's what happened to me here:
Tip! - An exercise in Situational Awareness today.
Went to the park today for the daily dog walk with wifey. Most of the time, the folks there are normal and friendly, ready with a "good morning" as you pass by. Today, as we were making the lap, I noticed a car parked on the side with two women (I think) in it and a young (20-something year...www.patriotgunbuilders.com
Later that day (or the next, I forget)... my card was used fraudulently.
Sorry. More internet bullshit. Some dude with an Arduino and off the shelf RFID reader who thinks he's a black hat. Credit cards dont work that way, and there are a half dozen different variations of RFID. Some are easily read. By design.Don’t believe the hype.
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Reading RFID Cards From Afar Easily
RFID hacking has been around for years, but so far all the builds to sniff data out of someone’s wallet have been too large, too small a range, or were much too complicated for a random Joe t…hackaday.com
Anything to do with a computer is vulnerable to a man in the middle attack, regardless of the tech.