The red numbers on the back of a social security card are control numbers that verify the authenticity of the card. They serve no other purpose.
The red numbers on the back of a social security card are control numbers that verify the authenticity of the card. They serve no other purpose.
its the last three numbers on the back of the card
It's the name of the company that make card for holidays .
Here's a great article that explains what all the numbers on a credit card mean http://techniglee.com/2011/01/credit-card-numbers-explained/
It probably means that you have a spoon with a maker's hallmark on it. I'm not familiar with that particular hallmark but it's likely silver or at least sliver plated.
The numbers on the back of greeting cards usually refer to a specific design code or item number used by the card manufacturer to identify the style or type of card. It helps the manufacturer keep track of inventory and reorder popular designs.
H100
Here's a great article that explains what all the numbers on a credit card mean http://techniglee.com/2011/01/credit-card-numbers-explained/
Yes! its true. i am a child at the age of 7, (really! i mean it) and i had an email that said "Hallmark e-card" and my dad virus checked it. It said virus detected. Be very careful!
It is the long set of big numbers running across the middle of the face of the card (usually divided into 4 blocks of 4 numbers).
Nothing that's actually relevant to you.The numbers on the back of the card are printed at the same time the basic card (the logos, the words "Social Security", etc.) are printed and before the personal information (name, SSN) are added, So the Social Security Administration has, somewhere, a ton of preprinted blank cards, just waiting to be assigned to people. The numbers on the back are used to help keep track of these (the SSA could, I suppose, mark the sequence control number on a particular card "valid" in a database at the time the card was assigned, so they'd know that a stolen blank card which had a name and number added by the thief was not legitimate because it wouldn't be marked as valid in the database, though I don't know if they actually do this or not). They have no other meaning or purpose.The red numbers on the back of a social security card are control numbers that verify the authenticity of the card. They serve no other purpose.