You need to become more comfortable and patient about such necessary, and ubiquitous, procedures otherwise you may experience much inconvenience going forward. For example, you now need an ETA to go to some countries and the application is typically performed on your phone with the use of the phone's camera. I recently bought a new car entirely with a phone app that required pictures of both driver's licenses, picture of the title of the trade-in, numerous pictures of the trade-in, and final payment via bank transfer (done on my phone via their app also). It was the easiest, most convenient, and fastest new car transaction I have ever experienced.
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Originally Posted by Boomer
I had not tried to log in to Social Security for a long time, until about an hour ago. I never made it because the process is a convoluted mess. It now requires that govID thing or whatever it is called.
I could not believe it was asking me to take a picture of myself with my driver's license. It is supposed to be some kind of new authentication add-on. Sending a code to my phone was not enough. Now it wants me to take a picture of myself and send it to them. How creepy.
How can putting even more information online be more secure? Is this supposed to be the latest, greatest, state-of-the-art security? If so, why is it still asking us to check those stupid boxes with pictures in them to prove we are not robots?
All I wanted was my 2025 statement. It was easy to get to the last time I looked. I probably printed it then but can't find it now.
I thought maybe it was just me, so I asked Google and found out I am not the only one ranting about this. I backed out because it does not feel secure to me. Adding two more pieces of information to a system that could be ripe for hacking makes me wary.
Does anybody know how to return to getting annual statements in the mail?
I miss the last century. Almost every day, I find myself quoting Dorothy Parker who was said to answer her door or phone by saying, "What fresh hell is this?" I don't say it to phone calls or visitors, but I say it when I turn on the computer and see what's new.
Boomer
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