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475 points danielstocks | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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vesinisa ◴[] No.27301780[source]
Klarna is no stranger to criminally lax attitude towards data privacy and security. In Finland, they implemented a checkout flow based only on your SSN (personal ID number). By simply entering someone else's SSN (which is not hard to guess/pry) you can reveal anyone's official home address.

Further, they enable a "pay later by invoice" checkout flow, again by just knowing someone's SSN. Scammers use this to order items from web stores to automated pick-up lockers with someone's else's SSN for payment info. The victim usually only becomes aware about this activity when they start getting debt collection notices for unpaid invoices from multiple stores for thousands and thousands of euros. The debt collection process in Finland is famously unfair and harsh towards the supposed "debtor" (here: victim of fraud).

Unless the "debtor" (victim) actively opposes each and every individual collection, the cases will eventually end up in court with summary judgement. This will ruin the victim's credit rating, which has devastating results for just about all aspects of life. People are known to have collapsed under the burden of all this and ended up taking their own life.

Klarna's response to all this is that they want convenient checkout experience and some fraud is unavoidable. Although there are excellent technical means available to strongly identify users in Finland, they add a minor layer of inconvenience compared to just typing in your SSN. This is OK for Klarna since they give exactly zero fucks about security as long as they can make a little buck from it.

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1. sneak ◴[] No.27310306[source]
The actual victim of the fraud is the creditor who was defrauded by the criminal; they are just leveraging the unfair legal system to push the liability onto someone who was not party to the fraud in any way (the person whose name was used in the fraud by the criminal against Klarna).

This is the lie of "identity theft". It's not identity theft, it's money/goods fraud, from a bank that didn't do proper authentication.

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2. tapland ◴[] No.27310421[source]
And guess who's their own bank?

Klarna \o/