Things that sh*t me the seventeenth

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It just doesn't make any sense as per Over The Post's post. Unless there's some whoopty do super secret new security feature we don't know about it really appears as though they just made fraud easier. Crazy stuff.
It's basically because the raised numbers stopped being useful.
 

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Raised numbers were a throwback to the clacker machine that printed onto paper
The Office Boomer GIF by MOODMAN
 
Have you heard of carbon paper?

Let me tell you about carbon paper - did you know thats where we get CC from on your email - carbon copy - on a web page - guffaw
 
Have you heard of carbon paper?

Let me tell you about carbon paper - did you know thats where we get CC from on your email - carbon copy - on a web page - guffaw
This is the kind of stuff i repeat around my dumb campaigner mates to make me look like Stephen Hawking to the simpletons. Oranges the fruit being known as oranges a long time before the colour was even known as that had the monkey nearly dropping one of the cymbals in their brain functioning
 
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Fax machines in the mid to late 90s, I was hopeless with them when I started my first office job, I was the comedic David Spade.



A job I was working at less than a decade ago still had a fax machine got a good number of the years I was there

I never learnt to use it
 
Just had a look. "Very frail and prone to drug use"

Sounds like it was written by someone who had a vendetta.
That was all true but he had a falsetto that could make you cry and was he an amazing songwriter in a band that changed music.
 
A job I was working at less than a decade ago still had a fax machine got a good number of the years I was there

I never learnt to use it
Didn't you just need to dial a number and put the document in the feeder?
 

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Didn't you just need to dial a number and put the document in the feeder?
Exactly that. It would send carrier tones to the machine on the other end, establish a connection, then scan and send the image. One of the reasons they are still used (apart from the installed base) is that what you send is what is received - there is no opportunity for editing by a third party. A genuine facsimile - hence fax machine.

The drawback was that you really needed a separate phone line for the fax. If you only occasionally sent faxes you could dial the phone, wait for the other end to pick up and send a carrier, then press go on your fax and hang up, but you couldn't receive faxes unless you were actually there.

I got around that with a little box the size of a deck of cards called a Fax Boss. It picked up incoming calls and prompted for the caller to say something. If it detected a voice it switched through to the phone, else it routed to the fax. Brilliant device.
 
Exactly that. It would send carrier tones to the machine on the other end, establish a connection, then scan and send the image. One of the reasons they are still used (apart from the installed base) is that what you send is what is received - there is no opportunity for editing by a third party. A genuine facsimile - hence fax machine.

The drawback was that you really needed a separate phone line for the fax. If you only occasionally sent faxes you could dial the phone, wait for the other end to pick up and send a carrier, then press go on your fax and hang up, but you couldn't receive faxes unless you were actually there.

I got around that with a little box the size of a deck of cards called a Fax Boss. It picked up incoming calls and prompted for the caller to say something. If it detected a voice it switched through to the phone, else it routed to the fax. Brilliant device.
A specialist doctor a family member sees has a fax machine. Much teeth grinding when the office staff forget to swap the number over to phone and the fax signal comes back. We suspect they do it on purpose.
 
Exactly that. It would send carrier tones to the machine on the other end, establish a connection, then scan and send the image. One of the reasons they are still used (apart from the installed base) is that what you send is what is received - there is no opportunity for editing by a third party. A genuine facsimile - hence fax machine.

The drawback was that you really needed a separate phone line for the fax. If you only occasionally sent faxes you could dial the phone, wait for the other end to pick up and send a carrier, then press go on your fax and hang up, but you couldn't receive faxes unless you were actually there.

I got around that with a little box the size of a deck of cards called a Fax Boss. It picked up incoming calls and prompted for the caller to say something. If it detected a voice it switched through to the phone, else it routed to the fax. Brilliant device.

I remember fondly and vividly the old fax machine in the home. The rolled fax paper which was very sensitive, and one found every now and then a glut of incoming faxes on the floor rolled up.

Also of memory was the cost of sending or receiving...the cost of a phone call i think. friends would ask my parents and myself if they can send/receive for them. which we did.
 
I remember fondly and vividly the old fax machine in the home. The rolled fax paper which was very sensitive, and one found every now and then a glut of incoming faxes on the floor rolled up.
Thermal paper. Unfortunately it fades with age, I had some very important faxes in a folder and after about 12-15 years they were unreadable.

There's inkjet faxes that use plain paper, I think they would be common now compared to the original ones.
 
View attachment 2195408
This is the traditional ING debit card. You only get the card number, account name, and expiry date. The CVV verification code for online purchases is on the back. Mrs Post got sent a new card after a scam attempt.

View attachment 2195411
These are the new cards. No embossing (who uses the ol' zip-zap voucher machines any more?) but more importantly the rear has:
Card number
Account name
Expiry date
CVV
Customer ID

All in one convenient place for scumbags to get with zero effort.

It's now a thing for some workers to keep the EFTPOS terminal out of reach on their side of the counter, and get the customer to hand the card over so they can tap it. And on the way, conveniently pass the card over the top of a phone that's recording video. Hey presto, instant access to your funds for internet shopping, no card skimmer required because they've got your CVV verification code.

And if you DO need to punch in a PIN for purchases over $100, and they memorise or record you using the keypad, they now also have full access to your internet banking via your customer ID and PIN.

Sheesh.

What a ****ing security nightmare.


Welcome to the future.

I've gone from using the card in the middle.

1736119308564.png


To the card on the left.

1736119350387.png

I'm not one for minimalisation but I do like this one.
 

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Things that sh*t me the seventeenth

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