| kowenicki said: Not sure how it is with you. But in the UK you have no issue. Any fraudulent transaction is covered. |
Generally how it works in America, too. You dispute certain charges, and then the credit card company investigates to make sure you're not trying to skip out on a bill. I've never heard of issues with that system, and usually the company catches it before the monthly bill comes up, though sometimes it doesn't. I have a separate credit and debit cards, both hacked at different times, the first with someone cashing $600 in money orders in Maryland, and the second with a company mysteriously charging me $40 and leaving a telephone number, who claimed that they didn't know what the purchase was for (and looking the phone number up online showed that other people reported the same thing coming from here). The second one my company didn't catch, but the first one was caught.

Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.







