Yes. When you sign the application, you affirm that all info is true. Obviously, it isn't, because it isn't your correct SS#.
asking for your social security number
If you do not owe the creditor, then you should make sure they understand that the account is not yours. If the number they are using is wrong but the account belongs to you, the debt is still yours to pay. Unfortunately you need to work it out with everyone so that your credit reporting information is correct.
Open a credit account, steal their identity, keep your social security number as safe as you can.
Include the original account number if you are including the original creditor. Include the account number for the collection agency if you do not have the orignal creditor information and are including them as "Care Of" for service.
FIA card Services issued new cards for security reasons
This will take awhile, but basically you write a letter to each of the three credit bureaus with copies of receipts, your social security number, and signature. The faster way is to have your creditor update the information they send in to the credit bureaus directly.
Some easy ways to protect a credit card account are: to protect your Personal Identification Number (PIN) and security code, never use your credit card on unsecured websites.
When you pull your credit report you will notice at the very last pages of this report your creditor informaiton. This includes the name if the creditor, address, and phone number.
You should not file bankruptcy without first getting a copy of all three credit reporting bureaus' credit reports (one free each year: www.annualcreditreports.com). You will have at least part of if not the whole account number for each account. If it is partial, there will be a phone number to call where you can get the full information. You also get the correct up to date address for the creditors.
There are a few pieces of information for someone to login to a personal Capital One credit card account. The person needs their username, credit card number, password and security question.
usually this is because the original lender sold the account to a new lender which takes on the loan/debt, but the paper trail is still left on a persons credit report. If a company goes out of business they also liquidate their assets/accounts to another creditor. It also can be because the person did not pay on the account and it was sold to another creditor or a collection company. The most rare case would be that there is a mistake on a persons credit file and should contact the credit report company.
No, The credit card number is the long string of numbers embossed on the card. The account number is not shown on the credit card - it will be on your statements.