Sujet : Re: Codes sent by text message
De : Newyana2 (at) *nospam* invalid.nospam (Newyana2)
Groupes : comp.mobile.androidDate : 10. Mar 2024, 04:14:31
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <usj526$2kiu4$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3
"The Real Bev" <
bashley101@gmail.com> wrote
| We've been with Vanguard a long time;
Mutual fund? I was thinking of playing stocks. My idea was
to invest in a trash removal company. Cities are all subcontacting
to them now. Then there's construction demo. Rubbish is the
future! But even that seems risky. I can't afford to lose my modest
savings, not knowing how long I'll be able to keep working. Even
mutual funds were losing until recently. And the people who deal
in those take 1/2 to 1% commission, per year, whether you win
or lose.
| (before they set up that voice-recognition thing) they had to hear my
| husband giving his SS # etc. in addition to what I told them. It never
| seemed to occur to them that I could have killed my husband and was
| telling my toyboy what to say while we cleared out the account.
They probably figure that your boyfriend wouldn't be able to
remember 9 numbers.
The Treasury is actually a good bet for now. As long
as interest rates stay up it's virtually no risk at about
5% for t-bills. They're very efficient and there's no funny
business. You log in, enter your password, and they send a
code via email. That seems like plenty of security to me.
Anyone trying to hack it would not only have to get past all
that. They'd also need to get access to the connected bank
account, or add a new one. That latter process requires a
special stamp, in person, from a bank officer.