![]() ![]() ![]() How many of the institutions in Quicken's supported institution list do you suppose are actively doing this? I'd wager it's horrifyingly low. Now, banks *should* be coding that access to be read-only without any ability to initiate transactions or alter account details. It's how Quicken can still update accounts that otherwise have token codes or validation questions to set a trust cookie. ![]() If you have multi-factor authentification, they still can't do anything, unless they somehow can intercept your 2FA code.Quicken, Mint, Yodlee, and the like have all coordinated with banks to drop 2FA/MFA/cookie requirements for logins originating from their defined addresses. ![]()
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