I lost access to my LinkedIn account when they recently asked for my gov't ID. They have my real name, work experience, work email, even my credit card, etc. They still demanded my gov't ID for "community safety." Facebook pulled the same crap and that was the last time I used FB. Twitter did the same and I made a new acct. Meanwhile, jackasses on MIGA.lose and Reddit both tell me that it doesn't happen, "but even if it does happen, so what?" I'm not giving my ID to any damn website!
Awhile back, I knew someone who was using an eBay account of someone deceased to continue to sell off their estate items as per their wishes.
The decades-old account eventually got shut down before the succession planning could be carried out because eBay locked them out of the account requesting a copy of their active passport.
Pretty sure it was a sitewide change and had nothing to do with any suspicious activity due to the estate sale.
I can see the argument in this particular case with next of kin inheriting the account. But it definitely was a huge pain in the ass.
From what I've learned, it does seem like they target the most active users. The thinking being, "This guy is obviously hooked on our site, so he won't want to lose access by not complying." I'm sure there's all kinds of criteria that triggers the request, but that's a pattern some have noticed.
The deceased was previously actively selling off their things online in their very deathbed. So the posthumous pattern shouldn't have been that different when the next of kin picked up the torch.
nothing to do with any suspicious activity due to the estate sale.
You don't think it's suspicious if a user's account is active after they've died? That's about the reddest flag for fraud you could possibly have. Maybe I'm being naive, but eBay getting notified of the death through the banking system seems like the obvious possibility.
Anyone but DNC voter rolls would see post-mortem activity as suspicious.
I lost access to my LinkedIn account when they recently asked for my gov't ID. They have my real name, work experience, work email, even my credit card, etc. They still demanded my gov't ID for "community safety." Facebook pulled the same crap and that was the last time I used FB. Twitter did the same and I made a new acct. Meanwhile, jackasses on MIGA.lose and Reddit both tell me that it doesn't happen, "but even if it does happen, so what?" I'm not giving my ID to any damn website!
Awhile back, I knew someone who was using an eBay account of someone deceased to continue to sell off their estate items as per their wishes.
The decades-old account eventually got shut down before the succession planning could be carried out because eBay locked them out of the account requesting a copy of their active passport.
Pretty sure it was a sitewide change and had nothing to do with any suspicious activity due to the estate sale.
I can see the argument in this particular case with next of kin inheriting the account. But it definitely was a huge pain in the ass.
From what I've learned, it does seem like they target the most active users. The thinking being, "This guy is obviously hooked on our site, so he won't want to lose access by not complying." I'm sure there's all kinds of criteria that triggers the request, but that's a pattern some have noticed.
Certainly possible.
The deceased was previously actively selling off their things online in their very deathbed. So the posthumous pattern shouldn't have been that different when the next of kin picked up the torch.
You don't think it's suspicious if a user's account is active after they've died? That's about the reddest flag for fraud you could possibly have. Maybe I'm being naive, but eBay getting notified of the death through the banking system seems like the obvious possibility.
Anyone but DNC voter rolls would see post-mortem activity as suspicious.
This hasn’t happened to me. Are you outside the US?
The boomer con retards defend this saying "think of muh kids, its only muh porn sites"
Wait. What? When did this happen? Because I can log in with no issues, nor has LI ever asked for my 'ID'.