@Kaito wrote:
I'm not trolling? Me wanting to know if there's mystery shop sites that offer MFA for user login so that people can't changing specific details like my payment information is reasonable in todays information age.
@Cassiespark wrote:
If you change your address on Sassie, you receive an email to your current email address advising you of the change.
Honestly this all really far fetched. I sell cyber security software in my real job, and this isn't a place fraudsters are hunting. There isn't enough account or money to be had for them.
@Cassiespark wrote:
If you change your address on Sassie, you receive an email to your current email address advising you of the change.
Honestly this all really far fetched. I sell cyber security software in my real job, and this isn't a place fraudsters are hunting. There isn't enough account or money to be had for them.
@joanna81 wrote:
@Cassiespark wrote:
If you change your address on Sassie, you receive an email to your current email address advising you of the change.
Honestly this all really far fetched. I sell cyber security software in my real job, and this isn't a place fraudsters are hunting. There isn't enough account or money to be had for them.
I did update one of my sassie emails to a different email and it notified both emails, so that's good. If a hacker got into Sassie or one of the other platforms, it could hit thousands of shopper accounts. I had a payment of $800 come in today, so not all payments are peanuts.
I'm in IT as well and we "never say never" so I'm surprised that you think this is so far fetched if you're in cyber security. Not being snarky or argumentative but my company would consider this a risk, maybe not at a critical priority, but a risk nonetheless.
@Cassiespark wrote:
What are you worried about them accessing your Sassie, or similar, profile? Any info that is there is basic contact plus some demographic information. All of that is already on the dark web, I guarantee.
@ServiceAward wrote:
@Cassiespark wrote:
What are you worried about them accessing your Sassie, or similar, profile? Any info that is there is basic contact plus some demographic information. All of that is already on the dark web, I guarantee.
Most of that information is publically available without any costs. Phone numbers, e-mail addresses, physical addresses, a list of your relatives, any roommates you've had, and more can be found online. Plus, historical data on all of those can be found.
It is also safe to assume that more sensitive data, like SNNs, are on the dark web. Your best defense against identity theft is simply a strong password that is frequently changed, don't use that password elsewhere. Also, do not use the same username throughout all your social media. That makes it much easier for someone to track you down. Nowhere else will you find me under the name ServiceAward.