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273 points aaln | 4 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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kojeovo ◴[] No.42149815[source]
The privacy and security part is not inspiring confidence. Scrolling to the next section got me thinking "Don't get scammed at closing, get scammed before closing after uploading your mortgage documents to a random website."

Cool idea though.

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293984j29384 ◴[] No.42150121[source]
What sensitive data do you think is on a loan estimate? I've received a dozen over the years and it's literally just your name and the address of the property you want to buy. Both of which are public information if you do purchase the property.
replies(4): >>42150210 #>>42152306 #>>42152902 #>>42164965 #
1. Brian_K_White ◴[] No.42150210[source]
Public info that you bought a property is entirely different from info about all the properties you are searching for and seriously considering. Especially being able to couple that with what you eventually did later.
replies(2): >>42150259 #>>42150453 #
2. parsimo2010 ◴[] No.42150259[source]
If you're uploading a loan estimate you've already made a loan application for a specific house- this isn't going to give them information on every house you were considering, it is probably just the single house which accepted your offer and are shopping around for financing.
3. 293984j29384 ◴[] No.42150453[source]
Why would a name and a random property address have value before the transaction, but not after it?
replies(1): >>42152146 #
4. sangnoir ◴[] No.42152146[source]
Well, one is before they spend a lot of money, and the other is after. In only one of those scenarios are they prone to spear-phishing wire fraud on the Title deposit. The victim is already primed, and has indicated they have gobs of money set aside.