Wells Fargo has admitted wrongdoing in defrauding 110,000 mortgage borrowers, and to make good on it, they're sending out letters that look like junk-mail, containing a form that customers have to fill in to confirm that they want their stolen money back; if Wells doesn't get a reply, it will assume that those customers are donating their settlements back to the bank's shareholders. (more…)
Thursday 15 February 2018
Popular Posts
-
A British company named "<SCRIPT SRC=HTTPS://MJT.XSS.HTLTD" was ordered to change its name after regulators realized what was f...
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
@samcahnruns Best purchase I ever made! 🦈🍎 #fyp #foryou ♬ original sound – Sam Cahn Instragram is the place where dropship derp...
-
My guest on the Cool Tools Show podcast this week is Simon Quellen Field. Simon is a chemist and former Google software engineer and is the...
-
No one will doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion in Standard Rainbow's leggings . Their geometric patterns are inspired by the "...
-
We-Vibe agreed to pay up to $10,000 each to customers after tracking use of their "smart vibrators" without permission . The tota...
-
Saw this at a car show today. The guy drove it there... This concept inspired the economist Gordon Tullock to come up with the idea that...
-
Davit Masia, creator of Pixatool ( previously ), has created another app for pixel artists—this time with the focus on movement. Pixel FX ...
-
These margarines are for people who really, really want to eat butter, but not enough to eat it. I refuse to believe that that is mainly ...
-
Mysterious Galaxy is a wonderful, longstanding science fiction bookstore, host to readings for the Clarion Workshop, designated bookseller ...
Powered by Blogger.