One Monday morning in May, I woke up and grabbed my cell phone to read the news and scroll through memes. But it was out of cell service. I couldn’t make calls or texts.
That, though, turned out to be the least of my problems.
Using my home Wi-Fi connection, I checked my email and discovered a notification that $20,000 was being transferred from my credit card to an unfamiliar Discover Bank account.
I thwarted that transfer and reported the cell phone issues, but my nightmare was just starting. Days later, someone managed to transfer $19,000 from my credit card to the same strange bank account.
I was the victim of a type of fraud known as port-out hijacking, also called SIM-swapping. It’s a less-common form of identity theft. New federal regulations aimed at preventing port-out hijacking are under review, but it’s not clear how far they will go in stopping the crime.
Where do you buy groceries with Monero?
Coinsbee.com. Buy an Instacart gift card and load that on your account. Then buy your groceries with that and just go pick them up when they’re ready. I suppose technically that means that that bit of Monero flows back into the Fiat economy which sucks but I do put more than just my grocery money into it so some money always stays in Monero each month no matter what
Edit: By buying it through the gift card service, I’m also signaling to the economy, at least in some small way, that I prefer Monero instead.