Teri Cettina


Reader's Digest, January 2008

Avoid These Debit Card Traps

by Teri Cettina

When Brad Lipman took his family out to dinner in July 2006, he had no idea it would end up costing him $1,800. Lipman paid for the $60 meal with his debit card. After the waiter took the card, someone swiped it through a portable “skimmer.” This handheld electronic device allowed the thief to copy Lipman’s account information and security codes, and clone his card.

Over the following week, the culprit drained Lipman’s checking account and tapped into his overdraft line. He didn’t realize anything was amiss until his credit union called him about some unusual charges. “It’s hard to explain the feelings of violation,” says Lipman, 40, owner of a lending company in Thousand Oaks, California. “Someone had their hand directly in my money.”

Many people wrongly assume that debit cards offer the same protection against fraud as credit cards. But when a debit card is stolen or copied, there’s no grace period while you contest the charges. Your cash has already been electronically zapped from your checking account. And if it falls short, as Lipman’s did, you could face expensive overdraft charges that your bank isn’t required to repay.

Debit cards have overtaken credit cards as Americans’ plastic of choice for in-store transactions--33 percent debit, compared with 19 percent credit. Financial experts often recommend them as a money-management tool. Three years from now, debit card use will account for more than half of our retail purchases, according to the Nilson Report, a payment-systems industry publication.

Link to full article

[<<< Back to Teri Cettina Writing Portfolio]

 

 

 

CettinaWorks Home

Teri Cettina's Bio Teri Cettina's Writing Portfolio Contact Teri Cettina Teri's Links Teri Cettina's Home Page