After Six Days of Outages, BofA Claims It Hasn't Been Hacked 315
Lucas123 writes "After six days of spotty service and outages with its online and mobile sites, Bank of America today said it has not been the victim of a denial of service attack, hacking or malware. Yet, the bank has set up a new homepage that it says will help customers navigate to the proper online service. Internet monitoring service Keynote said the outage is unprecedented in banking. 'I don't think we've seen as significant and as long an outage with any bank. And I've been with Keynote for 16 years now,' said Shawn White, vice president of operations for web monitoring service Keynote Systems. In the meantime, a BofA spokeswoman continued to divulge what might be happening, saying 'We're not going to get into the technical details. We're not going to comment on the technicalities of what we do.' Speculation among experts has been that the site is under attack."
Re:Divulging (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Their lack of disclosure is very worrysome (Score:5, Informative)
(which of course is on top of the 3% fee they charge to the merchant)
No, it's instead of the 3% fee they charge the merchant. The whole reason they're going to make the debit card user pay the fee instead of having the merchant pass the fee along to the user through the product price is because as of a few days ago [federalreserve.gov], it's illegal for them to charge the merchant more than $0.21 + 0.05%. Now I'm all for turning hidden fees into non-hidden ones, but we all know that merchants aren't going to reduce their prices now that they no longer have to pay large debit card fees.
It's not like there's a shortage of banks in this country to do your banking with.
What about banks that don't charge a debit card fee? The number of those is definitely on the decline. Wells Fargo, Chase, and SunTrust are also planning on charging accountholders a fee to use their debit cards.
Re:All Anonymous and Lulzsec have to do now... (Score:4, Informative)
OK, unless you're an illegal alien or a homeless person, why wouldn't you have a bank account?
Many people are poor and cannot maintain a balance, and as such must pay a monthly fee to have a bank account.. which they cannot afford to do, so they don't have bank accounts.
Yes, these are probably mostly illegals; they can't get bank accounts because they don't have valid SS numbers.
There is a reason that the check cashing business is so huge in inner cities, and its not because of all the Mexicans and Cubans in places like Boston, New Haven, and New York.
You are ignorant and lacking of even a small amount of common sense.