from Hacker News

Chase Bank Accidentally Posts Transactions in Other Customer Accounts

by willyg123 on 3/27/24, 8:21 PM with 8 comments

  • by tcbawo on 3/28/24, 5:08 AM

    I once went to a drive-up ATM and withdrew $100. It deducted $100 from my account, but the machine gave me $300 instead. I walked into the branch and returned the money. They were thankful, but I never followed up with what happened. It was one of those small town credit unions. I guess weird things must happen frequently.
  • by guidedlight on 3/28/24, 8:51 AM

    I was once training an intern on the concept of “negative testing”, and as an example someone shouldn’t be able to withdraw a negative amount of money from an account.

    Upon a demonstration, at a multi-billion dollar financial company, it caused an error message but the account balance was actually incremented.

    The quality of enterprise code is quite poor.

  • by doubloon on 3/28/24, 4:07 AM

    Not simply a clerical error , an internal process review and quality control error. No one person’s mistake should ever affect a persons account in an ideal financial system.
  • by ProllyInfamous on 3/28/24, 12:53 AM

    I once had a local credit union teller accidentally place my cash deposit into another person's account. An hour after deposit, I didn't see my checking account reflect the cash addition, so I checked the deposit receipt and the account number wasn't mine.

    When I returned, this teller had already corrected her mistake (but I entered fuming/livid). She is now the branch manager and has been extremely helpful/attentive ever since.

  • by beretguy on 3/28/24, 12:40 PM

    Somebody messed up some COBOL script.