Today's Times has a piece written by a debt collector about how he helps people, In Tough Times, A Debt Collector Sees the Pain. An excerpt:
When someone calls back and thanks you for suggesting they get the debt resolved with me before it appears on a credit report, I think, “Wow, I did do good for someone.” It’s a great feeling to help someone out of a dire situation. I’ve helped young people just out of school and took time out to explain how bad credit could hurt them in the long run. They call back and say: “Thanks for the advice. You’ve saved me years of heartache.”
I wonder if the Times will print any letters from those who have different feelings about debt collectors (maybe readers of the Blog?). The article was in the business section, so letters should be emailed to sunbiz@nytimes.com.
Another article in the Business section, Phones as Credit Card? Americans Must Wait, describes how we may someday use cell phones as payment instruments, something that has been occurring in Japan for years. Does that mean that cell phone contracts will someday include TILA disclosures? And from the Real Estate section, Safeguarding Against Loan Discrimination, about settlements reached by the New York State Attorney General's Office with two mortgage brokers accused of charging minority borrowers higher fees than white borrowers, and how borrowers can protect themselves.
Wednesday's paper brought distressing news: Big Breach in Card Data Raises Risk for Millions. Here's the first paragraph:
Heartland Payment Systems, a major payment processing company, disclosed a data breach on Monday that potentially exposed tens of millions of credit and debit cardholders to the risk of fraud in what could quickly become one of the country’s biggest data compromises.
At the risk of trampling on Alan White's territory, here's an article from back on December 21 that I never got around to posting, Bob Tedeschi's Mortgages column titled Revising Loan Modifications. Some excerpts:
“The average loan servicer wants to reach a resolution about a loan modification with a single letter or a phone call,” said Steven Horne, the president of Wingspan Portfolio Advisors, which helps clients renegotiate loan terms. But, he said, devising an effective long-term strategy to enable a borrower to avoid foreclosure might take several rounds of communication.
* * *
But Mr. Horne, a former executive at Fannie Mae, suggested that the new loans had not been structured to best meet borrowers’ financial circumstances, in large part because the loan servicers that collect mortgage payments cannot engage in a lengthy analysis of each borrower’s finances.
It is up to the borrowers, therefore, to be more proactive. Mr. Horne says they can increase the likelihood of securing the right loan if they push for more personal attention, and do a little homework about their own finances.
And from December 18, Yahoo Puts New Limits on Keeping User Data, about how Yahoo will keep some personally-identifiable data for only 90 days, less time than the other major search engines.
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