Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Does anyone have experience using mint.com? It is a tool that links your bank accounts, investment accounts, credit cards and other financial accounts and uses that information to build spending history, going forward budgets, money management and debt management. It appears to be a good tool that is easy to use, works on PC or iPad technology and seems to be secure. My concern is linking all those type accounts to a single application. What I like is being able to enter information real time through your iPad or iPhone.
Anyone use it, tested it, had good or bad results?
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
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#2
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When I was looking for a finance tool, Yodlee was highly rated. I started using it.... Oh maybe a couple of years ago. I like it.
Online banking solutions | Personal Financial Management | Yodlee No... I've never used Mint Budget Tool. It was out there when I was looking but for some reason I picked Yodlee.
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#3
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I also checked out Yodlee and I like the features better on mint. Although Yodlee has a couple benefits that look nice as well. Just as an fyi, Yodlee has been hacked a couple times. Not sure if there was any impact to users or not. And maybe mint and others have been hacked as well, guess that's the type of information I am looking for.
Does Yodlee work on the iPad and iPhone? My biggest downfall in the past has been the failure to enter what I spent in the system accurately. I just never remember I ordered that second glass of wine at Garvinos. Being able to do it real time on the iPhone is a huge plus for me.
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
#4
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Personal finance - Purse tightening-Curb your spending This article was written 2/2/12. These were the reports I was reading when I chose Yodlee. Good luck with whatever you choose!
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#5
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I became so concerned about the "hacking" aspect I forgot to answer your questions. Yes.. Yodlee workds on the iPad and iPhone. I have used it on the road several times. However, I do think you are talking about entering cash into the budget. I use my credit card for EVERYTHING so I can keep records and earn miles! So I can't tell you if you can enter spending "real time" on Yodlee as well as Mint. I did find these articles.... Online Financial Management Tools: Mint Vs Yodlee Review of Yodlee vs. Mint | Sunk Costs Are Irrelevant
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#6
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Thanks Angie. Good information. And it was several years ago I discovered the hacking issue at Yodlee. Probably was 10 years ago.
"Davel says the service uses US-based Yodlee, which has never been hacked in 10 years and has 30m users, to compile the account data. Yodlee is also the service provider to mint.com, a similar personal financial management site in the US." Interesting that Yodlee provides service to mint, I will have to study Yodlee more. Good to know that it works with an iPhone. I also use credit cards for most things, b ut if under $20 I usually just pay cash. The biggest issue I have with credit cards in they all have way to many charges that the card record gives me no clue what the spending was for. Every time I investigate one, it was correct, but sometimes they are so esoteric that it drives me crazy.
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
#7
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Don’t do it. You’d be putting all your financial institution passwords on some computer somewhere out on the Internet. Although the service you use may have the best intentions, it only takes one unscrupulous employee to peel off millions of bank account passwords and store them on a thumb drive that slips into a shirt pocket. It’s been done before and it will happen again. Don’t be a victim.
The only system I would trust is one that installs directly onto my own computer and stores the passwords in a highly encrypted database that is stored on my computer. |
#8
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![]() Last edited by angiefox10; 02-06-2012 at 12:41 PM. |
#9
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So because any single financial institution is potentially vulnerable to being hacked, you’re saying you might as well put all of the passwords for all of your financial institutions in one place that you heard was a reliable company. And furthermore, because you don’t trust yourself to secure your own computer properly, you’re willing to hand over all those passwords to a third party outfit that will put it in the big Internet cloud where it’s accessible to millions of hackers 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Folks, if you don’t feel confident about securing your own computer (and I can understand that), ask around and hire a local pro to come in and secure it for you. They should have the tools to test your system for vulnerabilities and correct them. Change the administrator’s password for them to use while they work on your system and then reset it after they’re done. You should not have any passwords or sensitive information sitting in the clear on your computer. Never use the built in Windows “Remember Me” feature to save login information for your banks. Instead get a password saver that will keep them in an AES encrypted database on your computer. RoboForm is probably the most popular program for doing this. If you use a system like this, be sure to use a strong and unique password for the database itself. Wheter your system is hacked or stolen, your passwords are locked in an encrypted database that can’t be compromised. If you make on-line purchases, get a Bank of America credit card and use their ShopSafe system. You just enter the amount of the purchase and it generates a unique card number that is good for one time only. It is useless to anyone else that gets a hold of it later. The charges will appear on your statement as though you had used the fixed number. There may be other banks that offer a similar system, but I’m not aware of any. Don’t lean into the punch and don’t trust all your passwords to a third party. However, if you’ve encrypted all of it on your computer, you can use a third party system to back up your files on-line because the files are useless to anyone that hacks into them. |
#10
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![]() Last edited by angiefox10; 02-06-2012 at 12:36 PM. |
#11
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For solid password protection, most computer geeks use 'One Password.' You can read up on it from the link below and then google for some reviews.
https://agilebits.com/onepassword |
#12
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No, I use an app called My Budget Planner, which is just a tool for setting up a budget and trying to stick to it. It doesn't have any of my passwords.
For online shopping I use Paypal. |
#13
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#14
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Angie, I’m not sure what it was I said that seems to have offended you but the fact is that sometimes the truth hurts no matter how you word it.
When you make statements like “If someone can hack a computer, they can figure out an encryption” it’s obvious to me that you are not very informed on this subject. I’m sorry if it offends you but the fact speaks for itself. If you knew what I did for a living the past forty years, you’d understand why I can’t let financially dangerous advice to others go unchallenged. |
#15
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has an encryption ever been cracked
Interesting reading..... ![]()
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Closed Thread |
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