- This topic has 65 replies, 8 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 11 months ago by
Raybyrnes.
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April 19, 2008 at 9:08 AM #12487April 20, 2008 at 1:09 AM #190702
CardiffBaseball
ParticipantDammit now I’ll have that stupid song in my head the rest of the night.
April 20, 2008 at 1:09 AM #190726CardiffBaseball
ParticipantDammit now I’ll have that stupid song in my head the rest of the night.
April 20, 2008 at 1:09 AM #190755CardiffBaseball
ParticipantDammit now I’ll have that stupid song in my head the rest of the night.
April 20, 2008 at 1:09 AM #190768CardiffBaseball
ParticipantDammit now I’ll have that stupid song in my head the rest of the night.
April 20, 2008 at 1:09 AM #190815CardiffBaseball
ParticipantDammit now I’ll have that stupid song in my head the rest of the night.
April 23, 2008 at 2:25 PM #193480jimmyle
Participantthanks, I always wanted to know my score but didn’t want to pay. I used creditkarma for free and my score is 786.
April 23, 2008 at 2:25 PM #193436jimmyle
Participantthanks, I always wanted to know my score but didn’t want to pay. I used creditkarma for free and my score is 786.
April 23, 2008 at 2:25 PM #193419jimmyle
Participantthanks, I always wanted to know my score but didn’t want to pay. I used creditkarma for free and my score is 786.
April 23, 2008 at 2:25 PM #193392jimmyle
Participantthanks, I always wanted to know my score but didn’t want to pay. I used creditkarma for free and my score is 786.
April 23, 2008 at 2:25 PM #193363jimmyle
Participantthanks, I always wanted to know my score but didn’t want to pay. I used creditkarma for free and my score is 786.
April 23, 2008 at 2:35 PM #193402SDEngineer
ParticipantBear in mind that none of these are the “real” credit scores that the lender will actually see – even the ones from the credit reporting bureau (like if you purchased your score from Equifax) isn’t the one the lenders will see.
The score that a lender will see is from Fair-Isaac, who’s method of calculating their score is a trade secret, and unavailable to any other entity (including the credit bureaus). That score is only available through Myfico.com.
All the other scores that you can get are known collectively as “FAKO” scores, and while they might give you an indication of about where your credit is, they are frequently off by enough that your real scores place you in an entirely different category of borrowers (for instance, my Transunion FICO I bought from myfico.com was about 50 points lower than what the Transunion FAKO score was that I got a day earlier through them earlier this year, before I switched to monitoring my scores exclusively through myfico.com).
April 23, 2008 at 2:35 PM #193446SDEngineer
ParticipantBear in mind that none of these are the “real” credit scores that the lender will actually see – even the ones from the credit reporting bureau (like if you purchased your score from Equifax) isn’t the one the lenders will see.
The score that a lender will see is from Fair-Isaac, who’s method of calculating their score is a trade secret, and unavailable to any other entity (including the credit bureaus). That score is only available through Myfico.com.
All the other scores that you can get are known collectively as “FAKO” scores, and while they might give you an indication of about where your credit is, they are frequently off by enough that your real scores place you in an entirely different category of borrowers (for instance, my Transunion FICO I bought from myfico.com was about 50 points lower than what the Transunion FAKO score was that I got a day earlier through them earlier this year, before I switched to monitoring my scores exclusively through myfico.com).
April 23, 2008 at 2:35 PM #193489SDEngineer
ParticipantBear in mind that none of these are the “real” credit scores that the lender will actually see – even the ones from the credit reporting bureau (like if you purchased your score from Equifax) isn’t the one the lenders will see.
The score that a lender will see is from Fair-Isaac, who’s method of calculating their score is a trade secret, and unavailable to any other entity (including the credit bureaus). That score is only available through Myfico.com.
All the other scores that you can get are known collectively as “FAKO” scores, and while they might give you an indication of about where your credit is, they are frequently off by enough that your real scores place you in an entirely different category of borrowers (for instance, my Transunion FICO I bought from myfico.com was about 50 points lower than what the Transunion FAKO score was that I got a day earlier through them earlier this year, before I switched to monitoring my scores exclusively through myfico.com).
April 23, 2008 at 2:35 PM #193429SDEngineer
ParticipantBear in mind that none of these are the “real” credit scores that the lender will actually see – even the ones from the credit reporting bureau (like if you purchased your score from Equifax) isn’t the one the lenders will see.
The score that a lender will see is from Fair-Isaac, who’s method of calculating their score is a trade secret, and unavailable to any other entity (including the credit bureaus). That score is only available through Myfico.com.
All the other scores that you can get are known collectively as “FAKO” scores, and while they might give you an indication of about where your credit is, they are frequently off by enough that your real scores place you in an entirely different category of borrowers (for instance, my Transunion FICO I bought from myfico.com was about 50 points lower than what the Transunion FAKO score was that I got a day earlier through them earlier this year, before I switched to monitoring my scores exclusively through myfico.com).
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