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I got an email you know one of those many forwards that you get and are quite annoying...anyways I opened it and it says if your ever at ATM and a "robber" comes up behind you, demanding money you can enter your pin number backwards and it automatically alerts the police. You can still get your money though is this true?

2006-12-14 05:10:30 · 26 answers · asked by CC 3 in Business & Finance Personal Finance

26 answers

Not true...

2006-12-14 05:41:08 · answer #1 · answered by Mr. Malaprop 4 · 0 2

never heard that. in the panic moment of a robbery...who would think of entering in their pin backwards? maybe dial in 911 but even doing that would alert the robber.

When you insert your card at a ATM your picture is taken and is taken about every 4 seconds. It also ensures a picture of when the money was taken out and when the card was removed.

some ATM's have a 911 button on them.

2006-12-14 13:13:41 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

You know there are so many stories... now if you want to verify it for any inkling of truth go to your nearest ATM and try it.

See if any alarms start to sound or if the police comes running, please don't believe everything you see on the web.

Take it with a grain of salt.

2006-12-14 13:13:43 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Absolutely not. This idea was patented in 1998 by Joseph Zingher, but has never been adopted by any financial institution.
Yet another urban myth...

2006-12-14 13:15:53 · answer #4 · answered by lexy 5 · 0 1

My pin number is the same backwards as it is forward.

2006-12-14 13:13:45 · answer #5 · answered by the Boss 7 · 0 1

Sounds like rubbish Phone the bank.

2006-12-14 13:12:57 · answer #6 · answered by Victorio 2 · 1 2

No, it's an urban legend.
Check out SNOPES.COM and type in ATM Machine in the search and you will find it !
Although, banks are considering something like this in the future !

2006-12-14 13:13:14 · answer #7 · answered by Growl 3 · 4 2

I have never heard of that but that is an excellent idea! Call a bank and ask, I'm going to.

2006-12-14 13:15:22 · answer #8 · answered by Sunshine 6 · 0 2

No. Check out the Snopes article.

2006-12-14 13:20:15 · answer #9 · answered by eilishaa 6 · 1 2

Claim: Entering one's PIN in reverse at any ATM will summon the police.

Status: False.

Example: [Collected via e-mail, 2006]

I just found out that should you ever be forced to withdraw monies from an ATM machine, you can notify the police by entering your Pin # in reverse. The machine will still give you the monies you requested, but unkown to the robber, etc, the police will be immediately dispatched to help you.

The broadcast stated that this method of calling the police is very seldom used because people don't know it exist, and it might mean the difference between life and death. Hopefully, none of you will have to use this, but I wanted to pass it along just in case you hadn't heard of it. Please pass it along to everyone possible.

Origins: This seemingly helpful heads-up began circulating on the Internet in September 2006. However, "seemingly" is the best that can be said of it at this point, in that entering one's Personal Identification Number (PIN) in reverse at Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) does not summon the police.

Such a system was first imagined in 1994 and patented in 1998 by Joseph Zingher, a Chicago businessman. His SafetyPIN System would alert police that a crime was in progress when a cardholder at an ATM keyed in the reverse of his personal identification numbers. The flip-flopped PIN would serve as a "panic code" that sent a silent alarm to police to notify them that an ATM customer was acting under duress. Because palindromic PINs (e.g., 2002, 7337, 4884) cannot be reversed, Zingher's system included work-arounds for such numeric combinations.

However, Zingher has had little success in interesting the banking community in SafetyPIN despite his pitching it to them with great persistence over the years. He did in 2004 succeed in getting the Illinois General Assembly to adopt a "reverse PIN" clause in SB 562, but the final version of the bill watered down the wording so as to make banks' implementation of the system optional rather than mandatory: "A terminal operated in this State may be designed and programmed so that when a consumer enters his or her personal identification number in reverse order, the terminal automatically sends an alarm to the local law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the terminal location."

In 2006, Michael Boyd pressed the Georgia State Assembly to pass a law requiring banks to create ATM panic codes that would operate the machines normally while also alerting police. His wife, Kimberly Boyd, was killed on 12 September 2005 after being carjacked by convicted sex offender Brian O'Neil Clark and forced to withdraw cash at an ATM. (She died when Clark crashed her SUV while being followed by a civilian who ultimately shot Clark to death afterwards.)

Such a bill is before the Georgia Senate, having been placed there on 29 December 2005. But nothing has happened on SB 379 since then.

In 2004, the Kansas state senate sent to its Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee

SB 333, a bill that stated: "Any automated teller machine operated in this state shall be designed and programmed so that when a consumer enters such consumer’s personal identification number in reverse order, the automated teller machine automatically sends an alarm to the local law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the automated teller machine location." That bill died in committee that year.

All this talk of various bills in three different state legislatures may serve to obscure some of the more important points attaching to this issue, points that are key to making up one's mind about whether having such a system in place is actually a good idea.

No one in the banking industry seems to want the technology. The banks argue against its implementation, not only on the basis of cost but also because they doubt such an alert would help anyone being coerced into making an ATM withdrawal. Even if police could be summoned via the keying of a special "alert" or "panic" code, they would likely arrive long after victim and captor had departed. There is also the very real possibility that victims' fumbling around while trying to trigger silent alarms could cause their captors to realize something was up and take those realizations out on their captives. Finally, there is the problem of quickly conjuring up the accustomed PIN in reverse. Even in situations lacking added stress, mentally reconstructing one's PIN backwards is a difficult task for many people. Add to that difficulty the terror of being in the possession of a violent and armed person, and precious few victims might be able to come up with reversed PINs seamlessly enough to fool their captors into believing that everything was proceeding according to plan. As Chuck Stones of the Kansas Bankers Association said in 2004: "I'm not sure anyone here could remember their PIN numbers backward with a gun to their head."

Barbara "neither Smith nor Wesson is known to prompt mental acuity in those they are pointed at" Mikkelson

Last updated: 17 November 2006

The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/business/bank/pinalert.asp

Urban Legends Reference Pages © 1995-2006
by Barbara and David P. Mikkelson
This material may not be reproduced without permission.
Sources:
Hazim, Madinah. "Creators Pitch ATM Safety System."
Topeka Capital-Journal. 13 June 2001.
Kellner, Tomas. "Banking on ATM Safety."
Forbes. 28 June 2004.
McDermott, Kevin. "Inventor Urges Idea to Thwart Holdups at ATMs."
St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 28 March 2005 (p. B1).
Plummer, Don. "Push on for ATM Alert Code."
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 14 January 2006 (p. E3).

2006-12-14 13:36:30 · answer #10 · answered by parsonsel 6 · 0 2

That would be you entering the wrong PIN.

Think about it: how would banks manage that for EVERYONE's PIN?

2006-12-14 14:42:38 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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