GV for Landline security verification?

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Peterluger:
Quote from: Emagin on January 16, 2013, 09:57:51 am

Your question is not 100% clear to me but I *think* you are asking:
Will banks and other high security entities 'trust' my Gvoice number.

I can answer yes. I have use Gvoice both from Gmail/Gtalk PC with microphone (3 years) and with ObiTalk 202 / Gvoice as my primary phone and all calls to big banks, amex and such work, including card verification (although I have only done this twice sofar).

Hope that helps.

Quote from: Peterluger on January 16, 2013, 09:48:44 am

Like when i receive my credit card, it ask u to call from home to activate? Can i still do that if i port my landline to GV and link to my obi. If i call fr my obi, will i able to activate those security check?



yeah, that what i mean, since i am living at my address/ landline for so long. I always see card company send me the update credit card or replacement card and ask me to activate fr my "home phone"? I guess they do reverse look up number? to verify?

I was planning to keep my landline, but verizon (my landline provider) are so freaking crazy!
My home phone recently have no signal, and when i call them, they telling me it would cost me $100 initially to come to check, and additionally $100 for first hours if they need to come into my apt to fix the issue, and then every additional 30mins cost anothter $$$....!

That's the reason finally i give up my landline.

Lavarock7:
My guess is that the credit card company wants a "home phone" to call in so they can capture that number for security reasons. I believe that number you call is a toll free number and thus your home number is sent to them whether you block it or not.

If someone calls from a different number, more questions may be asked to assure the caller is the card holder.

A cellphone might be stolen from a card holder and be in motion, where a home phone is hard to steal.

Rick:
Quote from: psuPete on January 16, 2013, 02:32:13 pm

When I have used GV from my laptop with builtin speaker and using the keyboard, I believe I've had problems.  I think if I place the speaker in MOOT while pressing the keyboard, things are better.

Alternatively, perhaps using a wired headset.

On my Android devices, I have a system setting for DTMF selected as LONG.


/Pete


Mute?

psuPete:
Mute !

[thx]

Rick:
Quote from: psuPete on January 18, 2013, 10:26:31 am

Mute !

[thx]


I believe that "thx" in mute would be thx   :D

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