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I receive paperless statements on all my accounts. I want to save some trees.
There are many reasons why online statments are preferred to paper statements.
@Anonymous wrote:There are many reasons why online statments are preferred to paper statements.
...From a convenience perspective, you get them quicker, you can review them usually for up to 12 months online, although I strongly recommend you download the PDF files and save them for future reference...
One of the incentives some companies offer to encourage switching to paperless is giving customers who've gone paperless access to past statements from many years in the past.
Like you, I archive PDFs (and back them up onto another disk in case of a computer crash). Do make sure before disposing of your computer to wipe the hard drive, not just delete the files but securely wipe so an expert cannot retrieve the deleted data.
At tax time my archive of PDFs surely came in handy because I could keyword search for things like the names of charities to which I've made donations by credit card. There's an old programmer's saying "you can't grep dead trees!" Note to non-geeks: grep is a string-searching utility.
@MattH wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:There are many reasons why online statments are preferred to paper statements.
...From a convenience perspective, you get them quicker, you can review them usually for up to 12 months online, although I strongly recommend you download the PDF files and save them for future reference...
One of the incentives some companies offer to encourage switching to paperless is giving customers who've gone paperless access to past statements from many years in the past.
Like you, I archive PDFs (and back them up onto another disk in case of a computer crash). Do make sure before disposing of your computer to wipe the hard drive, not just delete the files but securely wipe so an expert cannot retrieve the deleted data.
At tax time my archive of PDFs surely came in handy because I could keyword search for things like the names of charities to which I've made donations by credit card. There's an old programmer's saying "you can't grep dead trees!" Note to non-geeks: grep is a string-searching utility.
Excellent additional information, thanks Matt. Yes I keep them organized on a secure NAS and I never discard a hard drive without using military shred on them and then discarding them in a way that they can't be recovered. I guess 15+ years in the business has given me a healthy level of paranoia ![]()
@Anonymous wrote:
@MattH wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:There are many reasons why online statments are preferred to paper statements.
...From a convenience perspective, you get them quicker, you can review them usually for up to 12 months online, although I strongly recommend you download the PDF files and save them for future reference...
One of the incentives some companies offer to encourage switching to paperless is giving customers who've gone paperless access to past statements from many years in the past.
Like you, I archive PDFs (and back them up onto another disk in case of a computer crash). Do make sure before disposing of your computer to wipe the hard drive, not just delete the files but securely wipe so an expert cannot retrieve the deleted data.
At tax time my archive of PDFs surely came in handy because I could keyword search for things like the names of charities to which I've made donations by credit card. There's an old programmer's saying "you can't grep dead trees!" Note to non-geeks: grep is a string-searching utility.
Excellent additional information, thanks Matt. Yes I keep them organized on a secure NAS and I never discard a hard drive without using military shred on them and then discarding them in a way that they can't be recovered. I guess 15+ years in the business has given me a healthy level of paranoia
Ah, so you're familiar with the DOD multipass erasing followed by thermite routine...