Jgrden
Member
To your knowledge, is there a legal issue with asking a purchaser to give you their phone number when using a credit card? State of California. 
No lawyer here either but it APPEARS to me that the state of California wants to do everything humanly possible for credit card thieves to get away with theft.
I think if someone refused to show me some ID and provide a phone number to contact them in case something went wrong with processing their transaction, I think refusing to sell them a pen would be the least I could do. I think an honest person would have nothing to hide.
Another example of civil liberties going way too far.
John, Why do you ask, have you had customers refuse their numbers?
While most stores will not do it, your card can be refused if not signed. Every credit card I have and every one I can remember seeing, contains the statement "Not valid unless signed"The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
Yes, but it was a good typo! :biggrin: The facts remain; we did and I'm proud of it.I'll bet you verified it with 411, not 911.
So, if you are a working slock and have a credit card, don't ya think chances are you have a home/mortgage/aprtment...and if so, then your address/telephone number is printed for public in the phone book..??
(b) For purposes of this section "personal identification
information," means information concerning the cardholder, other than
information set forth on the credit card, and including, but not
limited to, the cardholder's address and telephone number.
Good point. But what is a "slock"?
Yea but my wonderful sister-in-law, whom I love more than anyone besides my wife and kids, still cuts the address off of envelopes before she throws them away so the address won't "fall into the wrong hands".....So, if you are a working slock and have a credit card, don't ya think chances are you have a home/mortgage/aprtment...and if so, then your address/telephone number is printed for public in the phone book..??
(b) For purposes of this section "personal identification
information," means information concerning the cardholder, other than
information set forth on the credit card, and including, but not
limited to, the cardholder's address and telephone number.
Being a Californian all my life I would respond, but it would end up being political.
While most stores will not do it, your card can be refused if not signed. Every credit card I have and every one I can remember seeing, contains the statement "Not valid unless signed"
At least some credit card issuers will do that, Bank of America comes to mind a one - I think it is free.
Why? The woes of CA are on national news almost daily, which is why so many have opinions about them.Being a Californian all my life I would respond, but it would end up being political.
I must admit I am tired of people who don't live here slamming California.
That being said I live in California and do business here. I ask for telephone numbers all the time. I do not write the information on the credit slip and I do not keep them, the slips, past a certain time until the sale goes through. If I want personal information for future sales I put in in my computer. Most credit card merchants require the first 3 numbers of the address, the zip code and the phone number if you are doing business without the processing machine, like at a fair without electricity or internet accessibility.
I didn't mean to imply that you WOULD be refused, I doubt that you ever will be....I pointed out that you can be.I have had at last count seven of the world's most accepted CC and every one of them is very plainly marked DEMAND PHOTO ID. I have yet to be refused nor looked down upon and at one time or the other I traveled all over the US, the Bahamma Islands, and down into the West Indies.
Now following my stroke from Dec 2006 I do little more than stand in my shower in my own home and there is absolutely no use for a CC there.
The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
Well! Well! Well! something we actually agree on. I don't know what the world is coming to.The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
Here's the problem with your plan:
The reason that you sign the back of your card is so that the seller can quickly take a look to see if the signature matches between your card and the slip. A seller who doesn't bother looking at the signature closely enough to know that you insist that he check's your DL, isn't going to ask for a DL and you will never 'teach' enough merchants that it is helpful if you get your cards stolen.
In my opinion, signing the card is greatly more helpful than a 'see ID' message.
Well! Well! Well! something we actually agree on. I don't know what the world is coming to.The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
Here's the problem with your plan:
The reason that you sign the back of your card is so that the seller can quickly take a look to see if the signature matches between your card and the slip. A seller who doesn't bother looking at the signature closely enough to know that you insist that he check's your DL, isn't going to ask for a DL and you will never 'teach' enough merchants that it is helpful if you get your cards stolen.
In my opinion, signing the card is greatly more helpful than a 'see ID' message.
:biggrin:Slam???? Nah, that wasn't a slam. You should hear what I have to say about California when I do slam them. Incidently, politically Delaware is about as blue and CA and has almost as many nutty laws.Well! Well! Well! something we actually agree on. I don't know what the world is coming to.The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
Here's the problem with your plan:
The reason that you sign the back of your card is so that the seller can quickly take a look to see if the signature matches between your card and the slip. A seller who doesn't bother looking at the signature closely enough to know that you insist that he check's your DL, isn't going to ask for a DL and you will never 'teach' enough merchants that it is helpful if you get your cards stolen.
In my opinion, signing the card is greatly more helpful than a 'see ID' message.
I am still ****ed of at Smitty for slamming California, but agree, you should sign your card. :biggrin:
Let's not start on Delaware and its liberal Corporate licensing.
John
Here's the problem with your plan:
The reason that you sign the back of your card is so that the seller can quickly take a look to see if the signature matches between your card and the slip. A seller who doesn't bother looking at the signature closely enough to know that you insist that he check's your DL, isn't going to ask for a DL and you will never 'teach' enough merchants that it is helpful if you get your cards stolen.
In my opinion, signing the card is greatly more helpful than a 'see ID' message.
The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
While most stores will not do it, your card can be refused if not signed. Every credit card I have and every one I can remember seeing, contains the statement "Not valid unless signed"The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
At least some credit card issuers will do that, Bank of America comes to mind a one - I think it is free.
I know that most stores do not check....but I had a WaWa that just yesterday did compare the signature on my card with the slip I signed.While most stores will not do it, your card can be refused if not signed. Every credit card I have and every one I can remember seeing, contains the statement "Not valid unless signed"The following will not work if you do not have the credit card in your hands ...
I NEVER sign the back of any of my credit cards. Instead I write quite clearly in permanent ink DEMAND PHOTO ID. When I give a vendor my card and they do not ask I politely (most times) give them my drivers license. Many respond, 'I don't need that' and I tell them to check the back of the card.
If I have to go to the trouble of teaching the individual to check ID then I go to the trouble of going to the manager and telling then a thing or two. When I get home I call the corporate office and read them the riot act as well.
My vote ... put photographs of the user on the card ... SAMS does that when they issue a membership card so it can't be all that difficult.
At least some credit card issuers will do that, Bank of America comes to mind a one - I think it is free.
Smitty,
You beat me to this post, but I believe you are correct... the cards are supposed to be signed and I have even had one merchant ask me to sign mine before they could/would accept it... which has a real logical to the situation... if I signed both the back of the card and the sales slip, the signatures would naturally match....
However, I've found that very few merchants even look at the back of a card... they just grab it and run it ... anxious to get that sale I guess.
Here's the problem with your plan:
The reason that you sign the back of your card is so that the seller can quickly take a look to see if the signature matches between your card and the slip. A seller who doesn't bother looking at the signature closely enough to know that you insist that he check's your DL, isn't going to ask for a DL and you will never 'teach' enough merchants that it is helpful if you get your cards stolen.
In my opinion, signing the card is greatly more helpful than a 'see ID' message.
Why should I provide my signature so a thief can practice forging it?