My lesson from all of this is to be more aware of what is being changed to my card
It is easy to pile on FOC right now but think of what they were going through. Tens of thousands of online panic purchases over an incredibly short period of time. So much so that they had to close their storefront operation to deal with and keep track of them. Like every other business, the impossibility of hiring competent and trained staff.
Hey FOC!
Just a heads up that there's some interesting reddit finger pointing going on regarding credit cards being compromised shortly after purchasing from your store online:
https://www.reddit.com/r/canadaguns...ndroidcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button
May want to triple check that you don't have a compromised system or employee.
EDIT:
I'm on the list of people who were hit. I had made a purchase in the summer and a month later had a compromised card.
It could would be good to spell the name of the company compromised with their credit card system. Terms like FOC mean little to most people. We cannot be in that much of a hurry, can we?
When we purchase online there is a level of responsibility on both ends. The business has to make sure it has a secure system which is typically handled by some other level or business, and we have to be aware of the things that are charged against our cards and ensure that system does not fail us. The fact that credit cards are compromised all the time is a fact and most card companies deal with it as a part of doing business.
Both Personal responsibility and trust has a role here. I cannot fault FOC totally, but yes maybe they should have warned customers, but the shopping cart part of their online business may not be theirs so maybe the role of that warning was left to the company that provides that service.
My lesson from all of this is to be more aware of what is being changed to my card, to utilize an online shopping strategy that minimizes the potential for fraud through 2 step verifications. and using the other security tool available from the company that provides the CC.
It is easy to pile on FOC right now but think of what they were going through. Tens of thousands of online panic purchases over an incredibly short period of time. So much so that they had to close their storefront operation to deal with and keep track of them. Like every other business, the impossibility of hiring competent and trained staff. Same goes for the company providing their online shopping cart system. It was a pretty easy tie for a hacker to make inroads with the malware sitting on some purchasers computer, so is it any wonder that somethings may have fallen between the cracks. I think really maybe we take the lessons learned and each go our own way and lay the blame where it needs to be. At the feet of Trudeau and Singh.
Thinking out loud, but if their computers have been hacked, would that mean PAL and address information would be compromised, too?
Lessons learned.
FOC cannot be trusted by any means.
YOU are a obvious shill defending this companies immoral and likely illegal actions since FOC allowed compromised data to continue to be transmitted after VISA alerted them.
Dude seriously? Look what subforum this is in.
When we purchase online there is a level of responsibility on both ends. The business has to make sure it has a secure system which is typically handled by some other level or business, and we have to be aware of the things that are charged against our cards and ensure that system does not fail us. The fact that credit cards are compromised all the time is a fact and most card companies deal with it as a part of doing business.
Both Personal responsibility and trust has a role here. I cannot fault FOC totally, but yes maybe they should have warned customers, but the shopping cart part of their online business may not be theirs so maybe the role of that warning was left to the company that provides that service.
My lesson from all of this is to be more aware of what is being changed to my card, to utilize an online shopping strategy that minimizes the potential for fraud through 2 step verifications. and using the other security tool available from the company that provides the CC.
It is easy to pile on FOC right now but think of what they were going through. Tens of thousands of online panic purchases over an incredibly short period of time. So much so that they had to close their storefront operation to deal with and keep track of them. Like every other business, the impossibility of hiring competent and trained staff. Same goes for the company providing their online shopping cart system. It was a pretty easy tie for a hacker to make inroads with the malware sitting on some purchasers computer, so is it any wonder that somethings may have fallen between the cracks. I think really maybe we take the lessons learned and each go our own way and lay the blame where it needs to be. At the feet of Trudeau and Singh.
How does one close their FOC account and Tenda as well?
How does one close their FOC account and Tenda as well?
It could would be good to spell the name of the company compromised with their credit card system. Terms like FOC mean little to most people. We cannot be in that much of a hurry, can we?