Kay C Lan wrote:

I look in my wallet an there are a couple of notes and a couple of plastic
cards. The notes represent about 0.01% of iMoney I have in my account. I can
use those plastic cards to access the BankCloud and if the strangers at the
Bank are willing, the machine will give me more real money on a 1 to 1
reduction of my iMoney. Sometimes I don't even have to change iMoney into
real money, I just go to the shop and transfer iMoney from my account to
their iMoney account which all resides in the same BankCloud. Of course I
have to pay a 'rental' fee for the privilege of being able to access my
iMoney at virtually any time or shop. But then again, if a stranger at the
bank goes all Nick Leeson on me, the bank will collapse and my iMoney in the
BankCloud will disappear like the early morning stratocumulus, leaving me
without any real money.

Strange what we think we'd never do.

Or even stranger, we could trust our money to so-called professional money managers who mishandle it so badly that the world economy is brought to the edge of collapse. ;)

For all of our concerns about online security, one of the most common methods is still the most old-school:

Every day millions of us go to restaurants where we hand our credit card to a stranger who takes it out of the room for several minutes. Ostensibly they're merely processing the transaction, but of course we have no way to know exactly what happens while the card is out of the room.

I do a lot of online banking, but the only instance of identity theft I've experienced was from numbers stolen off a card I only use in the physical world.

Further irony: most old-school modems used at restaurants and retail stores transmit without encryption over standard phone lines. While those lines aren't exposed to the Internet, they are vulnerable to any physical interception of traffic, such as tapping the local trunk.

And here in the States we have a growing problem with fake or modified ATMs that skim card data.

Remember: just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you. :)

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World
 LiveCode training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
 Webzine for LiveCode developers: http://www.LiveCodeJournal.com
 LiveCode Journal blog: http://LiveCodejournal.com/blog.irv

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