The number was on a card in a selling wallet to show how a social security card could fit in it.

  • invertedspear@lemmy.zip
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    3 hours ago

    There’s only a billion possible nine digit number. There’s no algorithm to them. There might have been some level of regional allocation since my sister and I have the same first 3 digits, but I doubt that’s still a thing. Also TINs issued to corporate entities also draw from that numbering system, so there are significantly less than a billion possible SSNs

    There’s about 350 million people in the US.

    Just make up a nine digit number that doesn’t start with an 9 (IIRC TINs use the range of numbers starting with 9) and you have a better than 1 in 3 chance of getting it right.

    • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 hours ago

      it’s usually asked for in cases where it needs to match with your name because you’re giving them your name also

  • jqubed@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    In 1938, wallet manufacturer the E. H. Ferree company in Lockport, New York decided to promote its product by showing how a Social Security card would fit into its wallets. A sample card, used for display purposes, was inserted in each wallet. Company Vice President and Treasurer Douglas Patterson thought it would be a clever idea to use the actual SSN of his secretary, Mrs. Hilda Schrader Whitcher.

    Although the snafu gave her a measure of fame, it was mostly a nuisance. The FBI even showed up at her door to ask her about the widespread use of her number. In later years she observed: “They started using the number. They thought it was their own. I can’t understand how people can be so stupid. I can’t understand that.”

    One embarrassing episode was the fault of the Social Security Board itself. In 1940 the Board published a pamphlet explaining the new program and showing a facsimile of a card on the cover. The card in the illustration used a made-up number of 219-09-9999. Sure enough, in 1962 a woman presented herself to the Provo, Utah Social Security office complaining that her new employer was refusing to accept her old Social Security number–219-09-9999. When it was explained that this could not possibly be her number, she whipped out her copy of the 1940 pamphlet to prove that yes indeed it was her number!

  • arctanthrope@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    I guess when the consumers you’re targeting are apparently the type to need a demonstration of how a card fits in a wallet, you shouldn’t expect them to understand that that card is in fact solely for the purpose of that demonstration

  • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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    12 hours ago

    Ha! Been using this wallet card number for years to put down for businesses that want the last 4 of your SS# for “security” reasons when you sign up for a service.

    1120 is fantastic for adding a layer to your privacy.

    Hell, as long as you can remember them, use ANY random 4 numbers. You mom and dad’s birth months, your height in millimeters… anything.

    Your Social Security number is for government use only anyhow.

    Business data scraping can get stuffed.

  • ceenote@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I wish we could rewind time, have them use 123-45-6789, and see how many people still tried to use it.

  • Renorc@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Whenever I visit a grocery store that requires a phone number for member number it’s (area) 867-5309

  • aramis87@fedia.io
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    12 hours ago

    The first cards were issued in the fall of 1936. I wonder how many people were using this number deliberately because they didn’t trust the government.