I don't know how we got off track and started to accept the fact that companies can share information about consumers with other companies and potential employers. This should all clearly be a violation of any kind of privacy law.Company A should have no right to tell company B about my history with company A. For some reason, what seems like a no-brainer has become widely accepted norm. I know there are laws that prevent sharing consumer information but somehow we turn a blind eye when it comes to credit reporting.If I don't pay company A what I owe them then they can take legal action and I am legally obligated to pay them. If I don't pay them, they can file a judgement and that is public record. Nothing else should leave company A's records. We have let this spiral into everything we do being shared with every other institution. If I run up a credit card bill and continue to abide by the contract paying on time, this affects my credit score and can keep me from getting a job or purchasing services from another company. That is so unconstitutional and unamerican. There should be no credit reports or credit scores. Only public record of legal action taken against delinquent borrowers. #anotherneocapitalismcomplaint
1/29/2012 3:39:43 PM
I agree with you. But good luck changing this.
1/29/2012 3:57:29 PM
I agree 100% that it is a violation of privacy. But this is merely one pixel of the bigger picture. The government is allowed to wiretap anyone's phone. Put gps tracking devices on your car. They record all of your phone calls. They track all of your spending habits. They monitor your bank accounts. They monitor the internet. Google, Facebook, and pretty much all websites track what website you go to and display banners based on what you recently view.If you're crying about privacy, you of all people should know that privacy doesn't exist in America anymore. To target credit reports being a violation of privacy is old news and an old battle that was lost YEARS ago.
1/29/2012 3:58:49 PM
as an individual that has worked in lending and looked at thousands of credit reports, i don't think there is anything wrong with the current system.credit reports do not show what you owe the money for, just to whom and how much. Anything pertaining to medical expenses is X'ed out so the only details you have are an amount.When you sign agreements with lenders, phone companies, etc, you are agreeing to allow them to share information with credit bureaus. if you do not like this, don't sign and look elsewhere. good luck with that.furthermore, it's not as if anyone can view your credit information - only by institutions that need to see it to make a decision, and even then with your explicit permission. Given the fact that bad loans started this whole economic crisis in the first place, i see no reason for giving lenders LESS information to work with when decisioning applications.
1/29/2012 4:04:32 PM
1/29/2012 4:13:17 PM
1/29/2012 4:20:21 PM
^^wrong. to compare it to breathing is asinine. you don't sign a contract to buy a hamburger. or even a car, if you have enough money.the only times you sign these types of contracts is when someone is extending credit in some fashion.are you pretty much strong-armed into doing that? yes, but it's for the better of all parties involved that loans are only granted to deserving individuals. Otherwise, the entire system collapses when loans aren't repaid.Besides, take a step back and look at the big picture. of course everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but how big of a breach of privacy is it for verizon to tell other lenders that this person entered a contract with them, and refused to pay the company the amount they were rightfully owed? This is something that only those extending credit can see, and something they legitimately need to know.[Edited on January 29, 2012 at 4:28 PM. Reason : .]
1/29/2012 4:26:50 PM
1/29/2012 5:33:28 PM
1/29/2012 5:41:49 PM
1/29/2012 6:37:36 PM
1/29/2012 6:45:41 PM
1/29/2012 6:47:03 PM
[Edited on January 29, 2012 at 6:55 PM. Reason : Usury is a sin.]
1/29/2012 6:53:22 PM
^^who are you referring to accountability-wise? the three major credit bureaus are all in competition, so it behooves them to report the correct information...or else all of their carriers will switch.in my experience in looking at CR's, i can count the number of innacurate reports on one hand, based on the applicant's claims. every one of them was removed after settling it through the bureau.[Edited on January 29, 2012 at 6:55 PM. Reason : .]
1/29/2012 6:53:37 PM
As information becomes becomes easier to proliferate, this is a natural consequence. As a matter of basic systems dynamics, this will happen.The problem is that as information has become more free, the order in which different parties get access to this information happened in a starkly non-egalitarian manner. The government and the powerful have overwhelmingly been getting huge amounts of information about citizens/consumers, while the workings of our economy as a whole as remained surprisingly opaque.To whatever extent we lose privacy of something in our individual life, that should be balanced by a corporation or the government having its secrets exposed. But government, for one, has become viciously secretive, in fact, over-responding to the information threat that they correctly perceived.Keeping a stronger lock on your information protects you from individuals and small profiteer organizations, but it makes you weaker and more dependent on our societal institutions.
1/29/2012 10:18:58 PM
Hey dipshit that's why you're supposed to actually read the fine print, it almost invariably includes a waver regarding your personal information.
1/30/2012 12:34:51 PM
They shouldn't be able to share such information with potential employers, I agree with that.
1/30/2012 6:03:06 PM
If you aren't doing anything wrong you have nothing to worry about...
1/30/2012 6:39:29 PM
^^ Should you not be able to share information about your employer to potential future employees? ^ I disagree with that. People make mistakes all the time. It could be needlessly damaging if a credit agency makes a mistake and your employer acts upon false information. But other human beings have a right to freedom of speech. That free speech can sometimes cause harm is the price we pay to live in a free country.
1/30/2012 7:03:10 PM
I don't mind credit reporting in the realm of actually extending credit. However, I was recently turned down for a 5-month sublease based on the fact that my student loans had been charged off. I had never had any problems renting anywhere I'd lived in the prior 4 years. And I had paid the collection agency about $4000 over the past 8 months and offered to pay half of the total cost of the lease up front and that STILL wasn't enough to get approved. So while I can see that credit reporting can be an incredibly useful tool in lending, I think the system requires MAJOR overhauls. It should used exclusively as an informative tool for extending credit. It should not prevent you from obtaining housing or obtaining employment. Also, much more education needs to be taught to young people about the credit system. You can seriously fuck your life up for several years just because you don't know how powerful this institution really is.We shouldn't let people dig their own credit graves so deep that they spend half of their life trying to get back out. That might as well be called slavery.
1/30/2012 8:08:30 PM
1/30/2012 8:17:47 PM
You don't have a right to privacy, at least not in the way you're describing it. If I make a deal with John, renege on the deal, go to do business with Sally, and she's not interested because John told her how our interaction went, that's life. You have a reputation, and it can be ruined or tarnished. This principle doesn't change when "people" becomes "companies".
1/30/2012 8:56:03 PM
Same people that say lenders shouldn't be able to share credit information have made or will make a thread at some point saying that minorities or those that don't have a reason to use credit can't get a home loan because either no one will lend or the rates are much higher.
1/30/2012 9:05:39 PM
This is silly, as many people have noted you give them permission to view your credit when you apply for credit.Because I have good credit I like that they have access to it. If they couldn't access my credit I would pay a much higher rate on my home and car. This thread premise is off base
1/30/2012 9:52:21 PM
1/30/2012 10:14:21 PM
1/30/2012 11:30:16 PM
Risk is much more complicated than paying your credit card bills on time. Someone who pays their rent and neglects smaller payments could actually be less of a risk for a home loan than someone who makes sure they pay all of their little bills and refuses to pile up a credit card balance. The credit score oversimplifies it and then turns people who are on the brink and puts more financial pressure on them by charging them more for something in their past or something NOT in their past. Why should I pay more than you if i have never had a credit card and you have had 5? Everyone should pay the same price.
1/30/2012 11:39:19 PM
1/31/2012 12:24:40 AM
1/31/2012 1:30:20 AM
1/31/2012 7:13:30 AM
1/31/2012 10:18:02 AM
So the government has never created a law to help citizens fight back against predatory business practices that an individual could not fight on his/her own. Thanks! I didn't know that before.
1/31/2012 10:27:22 AM
1/31/2012 10:41:03 PM
1/31/2012 11:03:40 PM
Anybody can use any coupon. Don't use that copout and don't talk about loyalty points because shopping at kroger doesn't get me royalty points at harris teeter whole foods and food lion.
1/31/2012 11:14:55 PM
Can you buy a single item at Harris Teeter without a VIC card or a phone number?
1/31/2012 11:47:19 PM
^^ What is your point? I have been issued coupons to a different store that only I could use, they had my name on them. There is no law against such a thing and I don't see why anyone would think there should. Store owners are free to price differentiate among their customers as they see fit. It is a free country. Just as you are free to start haggling for a lower price, they are free to quote you a higher price. [Edited on February 1, 2012 at 12:52 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/1/2012 12:46:11 AM
I'm going to start charging my gay customers more.
2/1/2012 1:32:09 AM
2/1/2012 2:56:23 AM
I dont understand why some casinos offer me free rooms and others want $399 a night.Grow up dude seriously. Get your credit in check, having bad credit is one of the worst decisions you can make in life for several reasons:A) The pure embarrassment of having bad creditB) The tens of thousands of dollars you will save over your life by having "white" creditC) Being a respectful humanD) All the things i missed in points A-C
2/1/2012 4:41:26 AM
2/1/2012 11:17:16 PM
2/1/2012 11:26:35 PM
Thats not the issue. Anybody who can pay should be able to pay the same price not ambiguous prices based on their spending habits.
2/1/2012 11:42:35 PM
In your opinion. Luckily it is not up to you. I disagree with you, and so do the people making such determinations.
2/1/2012 11:47:41 PM
2/1/2012 11:53:35 PM
ExamPle of this... I bought a tv in fall of 2010. I thought this would be a good time to try to build a little bit of credit. Well I got denied for the credit so I just bought it straight cash instead. How does that make any sense at all?
2/2/2012 10:15:01 AM
Why were you denied the credit? Store cards are usually some of the easiest accounts to get.
2/2/2012 12:03:50 PM
2/2/2012 12:21:17 PM
You surely realize that there's a difference between a credit report and a credit score, right?
2/2/2012 12:29:21 PM
2/3/2012 12:06:21 AM