METABANK provides and processes Target’s Red Card

Target’s Red Card Hacked; Target’s Red Cards are Provided by and Processed by METABANK

 
Consumers report that they are unable to get in touch by phone with the provider of the Target Red Cards. Using the number on  the Target Red Card, consumers if they can get through only can hear a recorded message and then the call is disconnected.

Consumers report that when they phone the Target Store where they shop that they were told that Target can’t do anything to help them….. This is because META BANK is their collections agency and Target has no real control over the bank cards that have been issued for them by METABANK.

Part of the deal between Target.com and METABANK is for METABANK to have full access and full control of all of prepaid and credit cards. It may seem like a big financial solution to the partner corporation which is Target in this case, but METABANK hasn’t been a real friend to humanity at any time in the past.

Go to your own bank and put a stop or hold on the Target Red Card

We observe that in the face of encountering problems in the past that at the very moment that consumers need METABANK to step up to the plate to make their product safer than using cash, which is one of their foremost advertising promises, that METABANK becomes extremely unhelpful to their customer base.

We have found in the past that METABANK pushes the blame for any and all malfunctions in their product off on consumers themselves so that no consumer protections are ever put in place.

METABANK relies on the size of the population  and simply moves onto their next customer so they can repeat their scam.

Why is the USA still using magnetized bank cards? Problems with the magnetized strip have been highlighted for many years now. Europe uses a completely different system.

METABANK FAILS CONSUMERS ONCE AGAIN and those consumers may not even know they are a METABANK customer…. until now.

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Meta Bank partners with these stores: Do not get gift cards or purchase a credit/debit card at any of these stores since

PetMeds,

Best Western,

Dominos Pizza,

Macy’s,

Omaha Steaks,

Barnes & Noble,

Overstock,

and Target use Meta Financial, i.e. Meta Bank’s services

 These are Meta Bank Cards:Logo Companies

Take care of your selves. Do your research. Know who you are dealing with. Be warned.

Green Dot is marketed through CVS now.

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UPDATE

What to do if you shopped at Target during its data breach

By      
22 hours ago                      December 20, 2013

Consumers who shopped at one of Target’s 1,778 stores between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15 should check their credit and bank card statements for any fraudulent activity. 

Target (TGT) confirmed Thursday that it’s investigating a security breach that may have impacted as many as 40 million people.

The stolen data include customer names, credit and debit card numbers, card expiration dates and the three-digit security codes located on the backs of cards.

The breach affected transactions at Target’s bricks-and-mortar locations nationwide, not online purchases. [Curious, but also a lead for anyone doing an investigation into the origin of the problem.  The card processors and providers should be scrutinized carefully.]

Security blogger Brian Krebs first reported the breach on Wednesday. Krebs wrote that the type of data stolen “allows crooks to create counterfeit cards by encoding the information onto any card with a magnetic stripe.

If the thieves also were able to intercept PIN data for debit transactions, they would theoretically be able to reproduce stolen debit cards and use them to withdraw cash from ATMs.” [Is this an inside job???]

The incident may have involved tampering with the machines customers use to swipe their cards when making purchases, according to the Wall Street Journal.

In a statement on its site Target said the breach may impact shoppers who made credit or debit card purchases in stores from Nov. 27 to Dec. 15. The Minneapolis-based retailer said it is partnering with a forensics firm to investigate the incident and recommended customers “remain vigilant for incidents of fraud and identity theft by regularly reviewing your account statements and monitoring free credit reports.”

What should you do?

What does this breach mean for consumers, in particular those who shopped at Target stores in the period between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15?

First thing to do is check your credit card statements for unfamiliar purchases, as well as your bank account— daily — online to ensure there are no fraudulent transactions, says Linda Sherry, director at consumer rights advocacy group Consumer Action. Report any problems immediately to your bank. Your bank should contact you if your credit card was part of the breach. If you were affected, you’ll get a new credit card account number (obviously an inconvenience, especially during the holidays). You won’t be held liable for unauthorized charges made using your credit card number.

American Express (AXP) and Discover (DFS) said they were aware of the breach at Target and had fraud measures in place, according to a CNNMoney article.

If you receive a data breach notification letter from Target, “you know with certainty your information was compromised,” says Eva Velasquez, president and CEO of the Identity Theft Resource Center. (Consumers who know their card data was stolen can contact the ITRC at 888-400-5530 for help on what steps to take next.)

Sherry suggests impacted consumers ask their bank to waive the expedited delivery fee for a new card. Also ask if any credit monitoring services are being offered to victims of the breach.

What does it mean for Target?

The real victim here is Target itself, says Avivah Litan, a vice president and analyst at Gartner Research. In a post about the breach, Litan said that the retailer has no doubt spent a “small fortune on payment card security,” but was still hacked. [ Target partnered with METABANK. The cards are once again proved to be faulty at best.]

The payment card industry is likely going to raise Target’s merchant fee that it pays Amex, MasterCard, Visa and other credit card companies on transactions by a few points, and will also fine Target for the breach, Litan says. In the end, she estimates the theft will cost Target less than $25 million. But the fees it pays credit card issuers in transaction costs may be twice that amount. “If they get much higher, Target may have to pass on these costs to consumers in the form of higher prices,” she says. [You know that this will be the case!!!!!]

Security breach surge

[METABANK advertises that they are the largest processor of bankcards. We must wonder if METABANK has been negligent in their customer service here]

In the past few years criminals have grown increasingly adept at breaching the systems of merchants and processors that store or transmit consumers’ payment information. [Why is the USA’s banking system still using the magnetic strip bank card system still?]

In a report published this month, Javelin Strategy & Research found the number of notified credit-breach victims who suffered fraud increased 340% from 2010 to 2012, resulting in $4.8 billion in fraud losses.

According to the study, 15.8 million consumers were notified their card information was compromised in 2012.

The Target theft is the largest such corporate breach since 2007, when TJX Companies (TJX), which owns discount retailers TJ Maxx, Home Goods and Marshalls stores, disclosed that 45.7 million credit and debit cards were exposed to possible fraud. TJX’s computer systems were breached over the course of two years, beginning in 2005. The data breach ended up costing the company $256 million. In that case, attackers gained access through a wireless regional hub to intercept payment information.  [Hackers gained access through a WIRELESS REGIONAL HUB in 2005]

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Any advertisements that may appear on this page do not reflect us at mrnd5. They are selected by wordpress.com and make it possible for mrnd5 to have access to this site.

Meta Bank partners with these stores: Do not get gift cards or purchase a credit/debit card at any of these stores since PetMeds, Best Western, Dominos Pizza, Macy’s, Omaha Steaks, Barnes & Noble, Overstock and Target use Meta Financial, i.e. Meta Bank’s services

These are Meta Bank Cards:Logo Companies

Take care of your selves. Do your research. Know who you are dealing with. Be warned.

Green Dot is marketed through CVS now.

 

UPDATE

What to do if you shopped                                                                                                          at Target during its data breach

By      
22 hours ago                      December 20, 2013

Consumers who shopped at one of Target’s 1,778 stores between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15 should check their credit and bank card statements for any fraudulent activity. 

Target (TGT) confirmed Thursday that it’s investigating a security breach that may have impacted as many as 40 million people.

The stolen data include customer names, credit and debit card numbers, card expiration dates and the three-digit security codes located on the backs of cards.

The breach affected transactions at Target’s bricks-and-mortar locations nationwide, not online purchases. [Curious, but also a lead for anyone doing an investigation into the origin of the problem.  The card processors and providers should be scrutinized carefully.]

Security blogger Brian Krebs first reported the breach on Wednesday. Krebs wrote that the type of data stolen “allows crooks to create counterfeit cards by encoding the information onto any card with a magnetic stripe.

If the thieves also were able to intercept PIN data for debit transactions, they would theoretically be able to reproduce stolen debit cards and use them to withdraw cash from ATMs.” [Is this an inside job???]

The incident may have involved tampering with the machines customers use to swipe their cards when making purchases, according to the Wall Street Journal.

In a statement on its site Target said the breach may impact shoppers who made credit or debit card purchases in stores from Nov. 27 to Dec. 15. The Minneapolis-based retailer said it is partnering with a forensics firm to investigate the incident and recommended customers “remain vigilant for incidents of fraud and identity theft by regularly reviewing your account statements and monitoring free credit reports.”

What should you do?

What does this breach mean for consumers, in particular those who shopped at Target stores in the period between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15?

First thing to do is check your credit card statements for unfamiliar purchases, as well as your bank account— daily — online to ensure there are no fraudulent transactions, says Linda Sherry, director at consumer rights advocacy group Consumer Action. Report any problems immediately to your bank. Your bank should contact you if your credit card was part of the breach. If you were affected, you’ll get a new credit card account number (obviously an inconvenience, especially during the holidays). You won’t be held liable for unauthorized charges made using your credit card number.

American Express (AXP) and Discover (DFS) said they were aware of the breach at Target and had fraud measures in place, according to a CNNMoney article.

If you receive a data breach notification letter from Target, “you know with certainty your information was compromised,” says Eva Velasquez, president and CEO of the Identity Theft Resource Center. (Consumers who know their card data was stolen can contact the ITRC at 888-400-5530 for help on what steps to take next.)

Sherry suggests impacted consumers ask their bank to waive the expedited delivery fee for a new card. Also ask if any credit monitoring services are being offered to victims of the breach.

What does it mean for Target?

The real victim here is Target itself, says Avivah Litan, a vice president and analyst at Gartner Research. In a post about the breach, Litan said that the retailer has no doubt spent a “small fortune on payment card security,” but was still hacked. [ Target partnered with METABANK. The cards are once again proved to be faulty at best.]

The payment card industry is likely going to raise Target’s merchant fee that it pays Amex, MasterCard, Visa and other credit card companies on transactions by a few points, and will also fine Target for the breach, Litan says. In the end, she estimates the theft will cost Target less than $25 million. But the fees it pays credit card issuers in transaction costs may be twice that amount. “If they get much higher, Target may have to pass on these costs to consumers in the form of higher prices,” she says. [You know that this will be the case!!!!!]

Security breach surge  [METABANK advertises that they are the largest processor of bankcards. We must wonder if METABANK has been negligent in their customer service here]

In the past few years criminals have grown increasingly adept at breaching the systems of merchants and processors that store or transmit consumers’ payment information. [Why is the USA’s banking system still using the magnetic strip bank card system still?]

In a report published this month, Javelin Strategy & Research found the number of notified credit-breach victims who suffered fraud increased 340% from 2010 to 2012, resulting in $4.8 billion in fraud losses.

According to the study, 15.8 million consumers were notified their card information was compromised in 2012.

The Target theft is the largest such corporate breach since 2007, when TJX Companies (TJX), which owns discount retailers TJ Maxx, Home Goods and Marshalls stores, disclosed that 45.7 million credit and debit cards were exposed to possible fraud. TJX’s computer systems were breached over the course of two years, beginning in 2005. The data breach ended up costing the company $256 million. In that case, attackers gained access through a wireless regional hub to intercept payment information.  [Hackers gained access through a WIRELESS REGIONAL HUB in 2005]