• @[email protected]
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    273 months ago

    They should be - but they should also have some leniency from lacking clear intent. The people who spread this “hack” obviously knew it was check fraud and some of these folks may have known it… but some others may just be rubes. Obviously it’ll come down to the actual trials but it’d be good to let most of these folks off with just returning the stolen funds with no additional punishment. There isn’t really any deterrence value from punishing people who knew no better for exploiting a now closed loop hole - there’s no possibility to copy cat the check fraud now.

    I’d also love to see the FTC go after JP Morgan for such a fucking large security hole - this hack was only possible because of their negligence.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      I’m sorry, but no. Anyone who did this knew it was theft fraud. And if they didn’t, ignorance is not an excuse for breaking the law. I’m not usually on the side of the justice system, but this was clearly wrong. Maybe they don’t need to fill up our jails, but some community service is deserved.

      Edit: more accurate this way.

            • @[email protected]
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              43 months ago

              Special treatment? They were being stolen from. Just because the money wasn’t in a vault doesn’t mean you can just steal it…???

              • @[email protected]
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                -83 months ago

                if there’s a button that says “free money (don’t press)” and you press it’s absolutely the fault if the company for leaving the button out in public. It should be expected that any user input can and will be abused.

          • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
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            -63 months ago

            If I mess up I owe them money.

            If they mess up I owe them money.

            Seems a little one sided to me.

              • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
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                23 months ago

                Idk sounds like something a major banking company should never have let be possible in the first place.

                Sounds like they should eat that loss for not catching it or fixing it sooner.

                That’s what happens to normal people who fall for exploits/scams. They just have to eat the loss.

        • TheRealKuni
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          23 months ago

          the companies shouldn’t have allowed it to happen, JPMorgan was aiding in check fraud

          If I’m understanding what happened correctly, this is mistaken.

          Banks let you deposit checks, and optionally make the funds available to you immediately because they trust you (sometimes for a small fee).

          If you deposit a bad check, pay the service fee, withdraw the amount, and then fuck off with the cash, that’s not a glitch. That’s just you committing check fraud.

          Sometimes people NEED to get the cash the same day they deposit the check. This is a legitimate function of banking and we shouldn’t be blaming the company when people take advantage of it.

          We should be blaming the trolls who spread this “glitch” and tricked rubes into committing fraud. And perhaps whoever was responsible for raising and educating said rubes.

    • @[email protected]
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      313 months ago

      Idk I hate corporations but this one is 100 percent on the dumb fucks who thought by pretending that “money glitch” defined what they were doing instead of the reality “check fraud crime”.

      • @[email protected]
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        53 months ago

        In this case, though, what’s the damage? These attacks happened in a spike and all the accounts overdrawn are tied to social security numbers and real life folks through provable links (assuming Chase did its fucking job during account registration)… Chase can recoup the losses pretty trivially and they should have a literal bank ledger of every transaction. So direct monetary damages seem nil assuming people haven’t lost the money (and I’m only advocating for no additional punishment if the parties can make Chase whole).

        Then what about deterrence - we punish people to discourage future criminal actions… this loophole is closed and nobody can exploit it in the future. Additionally, given the flash mob nature of this, I don’t think any bystanders would see the response to this and think “Fuck, I’m going to check fraud myself” the event is over, the window has passed.

        So I feel like any additional punishment (again, beyond reclaiming the fraudulently withdrawn money) would just be vengeful - and I don’t think vengeance based punishment is moral.

        • @[email protected]
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          43 months ago

          Until the next free shopping glitch where I just transcend the door without paying. You are correct this problem is with parenting, society in general,and education.

        • @mint_tamas
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          33 months ago

          I’m not sure all that cash was just kept in the pockets of the perpetrators. I would be surprised if even half of the stolen amount was trivially recovered.

    • @norimee
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      93 months ago

      Ignorantia juris non excusat - “Ignorance of the law excuses not”

        • @norimee
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          33 months ago

          Which are?

          I don’t mean to be confrontational, I genuinely want to know where it “explicitly does”.

          I’m not in the US and my countries criminal code has a § (§17 german stgb) that as long as you are legally competent you are responsible for your actions even if you were ignorant of the law.

          If you are pointing at those that are not legally competent/ non compos mentis, I think the point there is not so much the not knowing of the law, but being unable to understand a law.

    • @emax_gomax
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      63 months ago

      Agree on all points. Like these people clearly committed fraud but if you’re careless enough to get suckered into this you probably weren’t the most financially savvy person to begin with. Balancing the scale should be enough. On the other hand the banking sector really needs to modernise. So much is built on archaic legacy systems and there doesn’t seem to be any motivation to modernise and foolproof them. The economies too busy chugging along to care about how secure the foundations of it are.

  • @mwproductions
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    163 months ago

    Users on the social-media platform began sharing videos that showed a so-called glitch at Chase Bank that was allowing customers to deposit big checks and withdraw funds from ATMs immediately, even if sufficient funds weren’t available.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      I mean I get it these people should be charged but seriously Chase? Aren’t you supposed to be like a bank that’s all about security? So we’re pissing away a bunch of gov’t resources to track down and charge these criminals cause Chase can’t roll out a remote deposit system that works properly? Seems like the gov’t should investigate how tf this happened in the first place

  • @Cort
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    93 months ago

    To all the idiots in the thread saying the bank should never have let this happen: this is cashing a check and you want this to be possible so you don’t have to wait 3 days after depositing a check to access the funds.

    A bank that’s done business with you trusts that you wouldn’t deposit a fake check and believes that the amount on the check is going to be available to be transferred.

    Anyone abusing that trust makes it likely that the feature will be taken away from the rest of us, and they should see at least a week of jail time.

  • @sumguyonline
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    53 months ago

    People are literally running out of money. This is expected.

  • @Etterra
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    -243 months ago

    I’ve always maintained that if the system allows it to happen then it should be legal. I mean I’m not stupid enough to go out there and try it, because I know it’s illegal. Just the law needs to change.

    • Nougat
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      343 months ago

      Just because you leave your car running with the door open doesn’t mean it’s legal (or should be) for me to take possession of it, you bag of corn syrup.

    • The Octonaut
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      173 months ago

      If your neighbour leaves their door open, can you have their television?

    • @[email protected]
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      133 months ago

      Most cars can be cracked with a simple receiver. A little bit of trust is needed for the convenience of society. Breaking that trust usually makes things worse for everyone.

    • @stoly
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      93 months ago

      I both agree and disagree with you.

      Agree: If you maintain a system, you are responsible for protecting it and for some of the ramifications of its use.

      Disagree: nobody has a right to commit fraud.