Yeah but it's what the deem as unusual activity. I'm guessing in this case it was the number of purchases in such a short time. It set a red flag off in their system and they blocked usage of the card.Originally posted by: Lucky
Originally posted by: jjones
It's not necessarily the amount but also the number of purchases. Maybe you shouldn't be playing with credit cards.Originally posted by: PipBoy
Originally posted by: jjones
It's for your protection, dumbass. A trifle annoying and perhaps inconvenient but easily taken care of. Better that than some jerk stealing your card and maxing it out.
$200 != maxing out. Thanks for playing though.
four purchases for $200 after 10 years of charging 20K/year should NOT trigger a denial unless he was overseas or something. I'd be pissed too. Imagine if he had bought new clothes for a date only to have the dinner be declined in front of his date.![]()
I've had this same thing happen to me a couple of times. First time I didn't know what was up until I got home and they had left a message. Second time, I knew what was up and called the 800 number on the back of the card from right in the store and they freed up the card for me immediately and I made my purchase.
What I'm saying is this is no big deal and nothing to get your panties in a bunch about or write a disgruntled "nasty gram". Now, I don't use Discover, never have, so if their customer service sucks, then that's something else.
