6 comments

  • 0cf8612b2e1e3 minutes ago
    <p><pre><code> If a card swipes in Chicago and seven minutes later swipes in Los Angeles, one of those swipes is fake. </code></pre> How does this work with online shopping? When I am sitting on the couch and buy from Amazon, where does the address get registered?<p>Can also imagine an edge case: couple shares an online account, one is traveling and purchases with the saved card details.
  • crmd35 minutes ago
    &gt; Drawback: this doesn’t work until you have history. New accounts have no baseline.<p>This is an underrated CX factor: If my card gets denied when i’m a new customer or exhibiting a new pattern, i’m impressed with their software.<p>However if they deny a transaction where there is any previous history of me authenticating, then I’m frustrated by their naive paranoid algorithm.
  • jstanley41 minutes ago
    &gt; Real cardholders almost never buy something for exactly $1.00. Coffee is $4.73, gas is $52.81. The roundness is the signal.<p>Surely this depends on how the vendor sets their prices? If you&#x27;re going to buy something from a website to test a stolen credit card you don&#x27;t just get to make up your own prices.<p>And I think you may be over-indexing on the US &quot;prices don&#x27;t include tax&quot; thing. Elsewhere, round-number prices are extremely common.<p>In fact a lot of the rest of the stuff in the post seems like it wouldn&#x27;t work very well either. (E.g. you&#x27;re flagging anyone who has done a transaction in the last 90 days outside the range of hours at which they have 2+ transactions? Wouldn&#x27;t that be like 50% of people?).<p>It&#x27;s unclear to me whether this article is an attempt at breaking down complex expertise into over-simplified SQL queries, or whether it is all speculative and made up.<p>There is a conflict between &quot;Six SQL patterns I use to catch transaction fraud&quot; and &quot;Nothing here comes from anything I’ve actually worked on or seen&quot;.
    • normie300014 minutes ago
      Worse than that.<p>Coffee usually _is_ a round number in my experience, and I know of people who aim for round numbers when filling their car, and of fuel stations which require a pre-set value, often 10, 20, 50€ etc
  • maciekkmrk13 minutes ago
    What if I go on a roadtrip and suddenly get gas at 2am?
  • sincerely14 minutes ago
    This is quite interesting, but the blatantly AI generated explanations are like an anti-signal for quality
  • achierius14 minutes ago
    This seems interesting, but has so many signs of AI writing that I worry it&#x27;s not just edited but generated from whole cloth. Probably still a lot of truth in there but it does give me pause!<p>&gt; The roundness is the signal.<p>&gt; Slight pain, same result.<p>to point at a few.