Sentences with phrase «over fraudulent use»

Finally, American Express as always will resolve disputes over fraudulent use of any mentioned card.

Not exact matches

SWIFT, the global financial network that banks use to transfer billions of dollars every day, has warned its customers it has seen «a number of recent cyber incidents» where attackers had sent fraudulent messages over its system.
The British Medical Journal (BMJ) announced yesterday that it has finally retracted a fraudulent study used by Nestlé, Mead Johnson and other formula companies to weaken laws all over the world in order to create a multi-million pound market for so - called hypoallergenic formulas.
One security source told the Daily Mail MI6 was tipped off that the Israelis planned to murder Mahmoud al - Mabhouh using fraudulent British passports, while another source close to the Israel authorities told the Telegraph Britain was «feigning» outrage over the incident.
Using its patented ReputationManager 360 solution to identify computers, mobile phones and tablets used to commit fraud, iovation found that 3.8 percent of the total transactions it processed for online dating sites in 2011 were fraudulent — more than a 150 percent increase over the 1.4 percent in 2010 and 1.5 percent in 2009.
Your credit card company could jack up your interest rate or someone could be using your card to make fraudulent charges, but you won't know unless you're going over your statement with a fine tooth comb.
If someone is able to steal the information, they can replicate it over and over again and use it to make fraudulent purchases.
An update to the Microsoft Services Agreement apparently paves the way for Xbox One players to have their Xbox Live accounts suspended over the use of offensive language and fraudulent activity.
Contrarians use an apples - and - oranges comparison of the two graphs, which correspond to entirely different geographical regions, in a fraudulent argument that the current global warming over the last 30 years is not caused by humans..
That means someone used a victim's information to generate fraudulent residence history, income documentation, and piles of other paperwork that could be produced to the mortgage company over a period of weeks or months, and then went to closing and signed the victim's name on a deed, a mortgage, and about a hundred other documents.
You may recall a previous post about Sue Dietz, an Iowa real estate agent whose identity was being used by scammers to send fraudulent emails to other real estate professionals all over the country.
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