RadiclDreamer
Diamond Member
- Aug 8, 2004
- 8,622
- 40
- 91
Originally posted by: marleymarl
has anyone set up their ING Direct with this? It asks 10 questions (ie. what year was your father born, hometown newspaper, etc) I didnt set most of those and if I dont answer all of these ridiculous questions it won't le me add the account.
Originally posted by: Gooberlx2
Originally posted by: marleymarl
has anyone set up their ING Direct with this? It asks 10 questions (ie. what year was your father born, hometown newspaper, etc) I didnt set most of those and if I dont answer all of these ridiculous questions it won't le me add the account.
Go to your ING account and set them. I couldn't get in to FNBO Direct or American Funds with out setting my questions either.
Originally posted by: Kreon
Originally posted by: AccruedExpenditure
I have a friend that works for mint... interesting service, I like what they have planned down the line even more though
That makes it sound like they want to rule the world...
Originally posted by: Jschmuck2
I can't add my Newegg preferred account?
Originally posted by: zinfamous
Originally posted by: Kreon
Originally posted by: AccruedExpenditure
I have a friend that works for mint... interesting service, I like what they have planned down the line even more though
That makes it sound like they want to rule the world...
I would hate to be the one competing with Google on that front
Originally posted by: QED
Originally posted by: effowe
Leaving all my financial info out there in one centralized spot doesn't sound like a good idea to me. They may not be sharing your data, but as soon as it becomes large and in the public eye, you can bet it will be a target for people that want to get that info.
Why would it be an attractive target? Is some Russian hacker sitting out there wondering "How much did effowe spend on groceries last month? I simply MUST know!"? Or "I must know how many subscriptions to bald-headed midget websites QED has!" (just as an fyi, the answer is 2-- one is my primary, and the other my backup).
The only information you should be somewhat leery about being "stored" is your other financial institution's website login information, but all of that is encrypted with YOUR own password that only you (or at least, hopefully, only you) know. Actually, I'd be suprised if EVERYTHING stored by Mint wasn't all encrypted--right down to each transaction. If so, your fascination with hairless midgets will forever remain your own little secret.
Originally posted by: jamautosound
Originally posted by: QED
Originally posted by: effowe
Leaving all my financial info out there in one centralized spot doesn't sound like a good idea to me. They may not be sharing your data, but as soon as it becomes large and in the public eye, you can bet it will be a target for people that want to get that info.
Why would it be an attractive target? Is some Russian hacker sitting out there wondering "How much did effowe spend on groceries last month? I simply MUST know!"? Or "I must know how many subscriptions to bald-headed midget websites QED has!" (just as an fyi, the answer is 2-- one is my primary, and the other my backup).
The only information you should be somewhat leery about being "stored" is your other financial institution's website login information, but all of that is encrypted with YOUR own password that only you (or at least, hopefully, only you) know. Actually, I'd be suprised if EVERYTHING stored by Mint wasn't all encrypted--right down to each transaction. If so, your fascination with hairless midgets will forever remain your own little secret.
Did I read the sign up details correctly. They are asking for my Bank account login and password in order to create my new account? I honestly didn't go any further than that.
You don't see any issues in that request?
I think the only people I would like to have that information is my Federally insured Credit Union, thank you very much.
I'm assuming they pull your spending info directly from your bank every month? Categorize it and help you improve it? Sorry if I'm ASSuming something, I didn't go any further than the requesting my "Bank info" page.
Originally posted by: Gooberlx2
Huh, well I guess I won't be using this service past the month. Chase apparently charges $9.95 per fucking month to provide access for financial management software. I know BoA didn't do that when I was with them. Anyone other banks that don't look for hidden places to nickel and dime you?