• haywire@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Easy. It’s a scam to screw over anyone they feel like.

    It stopped being a can the applicant afford their current outgoings and afford this loan type system a loooong time ago. Now it’s a noose round the neck of anyone that has ever lost a job and missed a couple of payments or got screwed over by a company changing billing software. The number means nothing, I’m sure on some kind of grading curve it averages out but so would throwing darts at a board and assigning scores that way.

    The rich fail up and everyone else has to play by the rules or get fucked over.

    /Rant over

    • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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      1 day ago

      The rich fail up and everyone else has to play by the rules or get fucked over.

      You’re playing by their rules, and it only matters as long as we allow them to not play by the rules.

      I bet they’d stop doing it if they got literally ripped into pieces by horses. Or a horse’s solar-powered motorized equivalent.

      • Lka1988@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        I bet they’d stop doing it if they got literally ripped into pieces by horses. Or a horse’s solar-powered motorized equivalent.

        Idk man, Luigi happened and look what that did to insurance overall (spoiler: nothing). Yes I know that’s insurance and not banking, but the idea is the same.

        • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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          1 day ago

          Luigi (who I am not convinced actually did it) only stopped at one.

          I bet if we kept going, things would change pretty substantially.

    • [deleted]@piefed.world
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      1 day ago

      It was never a system that existed to just verify the ability to get a loan. Banks were the ones who did that.

      The credit score was always a measure of how individuals took on an paid off debt in a way that the creditors wanted for maximum profits. That’s why it wasn’t something individuals even had access to until they came up with a way to have people interested enough that they would pay for the privilege of being able to see their personal debt monkey score.

      It has always been a shit system for the average person.

      • ObjectivityIncarnate@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        The credit score was always a measure of how individuals took on an paid off debt in a way that the creditors wanted for maximum profits.

        This is demonstrably bullshit.

        Someone who maxes out a credit card, and then only pays minimum payments, and always makes them late, is, via interest accruing and late payment fees, making the lender basically the maximum amount of profit possible. And yet doing this will result in a garbage credit score, because using every penny of your credit limit is very detrimental to your credit score, and not making payments on time is extremely detrimental to your credit score.

        Meanwhile, take me, someone who never pays a cent of interest, because he pays off his card every statement cycle (and on time, naturally), and because of card rewards, I’m the one profiting, the lender is literally the one paying me, and ‘yet’, my credit score is in the 800s.

        So how do you reconcile that with your assumed truth quoted above? It’s very hard to understand how anyone can arrive at the conclusion you did, while also knowing (as I assume you do) that late payments simultaneously hurt your credit score and increase profit for the lender, just as one example.