From: Greg_Rose@sibelius.sydney.sterling.com (Greg ROSE)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: bd69f84918ab611ecbbc8f96a69d3cf3b89342bbe13c895454fa4c01b05d5022
Message ID: <9511160227.AA09304@paganini.sydney.sterling.com>
Reply To: <9511160031.AA41675@paganini.sydney.sterling.com>
UTC Datetime: 1995-11-16 02:44:52 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 16 Nov 1995 10:44:52 +0800
From: Greg_Rose@sibelius.sydney.sterling.com (Greg ROSE)
Date: Thu, 16 Nov 1995 10:44:52 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Amex cards extra four digits
In-Reply-To: <9511160031.AA41675@paganini.sydney.sterling.com>
Message-ID: <9511160227.AA09304@paganini.sydney.sterling.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
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Oops, following up my own posting, it proves I
should have been more careful...
I wrote
Wow, you learn something every day. I've never in
my whole life (well, my American Express life,
over 15 years) noticed those four digits. I've
never been asked for them by anyone, or noticed
them being written down, either. Exactly when and
how are they used?
But when I reread it I thought it sounded
sarcastic. It isn't -- there really are an extra
four digits printed on both my Amex cards that I'd
never noticed before -- and my question is
serious.
Greg.
Greg Rose INTERNET: greg_rose@sydney.sterling.com
Sterling Software VOICE: +61-2-9975 4777 FAX: +61-2-9975 2921
28 Rodborough Rd. http://www.sydney.sterling.com:8080/~ggr
French's Forest 35 0A 79 7D 5E 21 8D 47 E3 53 75 66 AC FB D9 45
NSW 2086 Australia. co-mod sci.crypt.research, USENIX Director.
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