
Chthonic asks: What's the naughtiest thing a boss has ever asked you to do? And did you do it? Or perhaps you are the boss and would like to confess.
( , Thu 7 Jul 2011, 13:36)
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was rushing to get out the door.
People would complain to the site that they had loan insurance, credit card increases etc... that they hadn't asked for. They sent a Subject Access Request for all information that that firm had on them...signing the letter with the fake signature.
When some of the 'applications' were returned, 'proving' that they had indeed signed up for insurances etc... quite often the 'originals' would have the fake signatures on them, despite the fact that the applications had supposedly been made some years before.
Sorry for too many 'quotes'.
( , Mon 11 Jul 2011, 17:50, 2 replies)

criminal, but certainly cringeworthy.
Yes, I believe it's fraud. Someone has been making their minions commit fraud to save face and a few quid.
( , Mon 11 Jul 2011, 18:19, closed)

And the courts are supposed to take a particularly dim view if the professions are doing it, many years in prison.
( , Mon 11 Jul 2011, 18:38, closed)

and put up a tool that allowed people to commit fraud?
1) isn't this aiding and abetting?
2) were you helping the fraudsters so that there would always be consumers in need of redress?
( , Tue 12 Jul 2011, 11:01, closed)

he was working for the customers, not the companies
( , Tue 12 Jul 2011, 11:04, closed)

The fake signature tool allowed you to avoid exactly what it proved. That companies would take your "fake" signature and add it to the documents you had requested that you had never actually signed.
Therefore proving that you'd not signed it in the first place!
( , Tue 12 Jul 2011, 21:14, closed)
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