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Forums - General - is mint.com reliable

basically its a financial budget program and works great with an iphone/touch as a app...however it asks for my bank account and bank password....i have looked into it and so far i have seen no complaints from other people, but i was wondering if any of you guys use it

https://wwws.mint.com/login.event?task=L&messageId=1&nextPage=/overview.event%3F



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well, they are a mcafee secure website, and they got good reviews from money, cnnmoney, and other big news sources.

Other than that, I can't say anything about them as I find their services useless. All of my bills pretty much are auto withdrawn from my checking, or go to my credit (which is later auto withdrawn from my checking) so I pretty much know where 100% of my money goes. All they would seem to provide me is more advertising for how to spend my money and supposedly save




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Nordlead Jr. Photo/Video Gallery!!! (Video Added 4/19/10)

I don't use it fully, yet.

However, my economic advisor uses it, and has 100% of his personal information on it....So I tend to think its very secure.

Nord - one major thing about mint.com is that you can track your budgeting and finances at a very, very high level. You can add stocks from your IRA to see how much money you have for retirement, in addition to bills.

It also has a feature that shows your expenditures vs. every other mint.com user to see if your spending too much or too little on various things like mortgages and food.

Fun fact:

Since the economic recession last year, mint.com users, on average, have reduced their spending by $400 a month in just over a year.



Back from the dead, I'm afraid.

Never heard of it. But it sounds reliable from the other posters



I use it with no issues.



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I only skim fractions of a penny. You'll never notice.



Yet, today, America's leaders are reenacting every folly that brought these great powers [Russia, Germany, and Japan] to ruin -- from arrogance and hubris, to assertions of global hegemony, to imperial overstretch, to trumpeting new 'crusades,' to handing out war guarantees to regions and countries where Americans have never fought before. We are piling up the kind of commitments that produced the greatest disasters of the twentieth century.
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