this post was submitted on 26 May 2025
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Equifax refused to restore his credit score or explain why it dropped to zero, until Go Public started asking questions.

Only then did the company point to its little-known policy: If a credit file sits inactive, the consumer may be labelled "unscoreable" and their score reset to zero. Tregear says the last time he checked, before it disappeared, his score was around a more respectable 700.

Go Public has since found a major flaw in consumer protection rules — that there are no laws or oversight on how credit scores are calculated, leaving credit bureaus to do what they want.

Consumer advocate Geoff White says that gives credit bureaus too much power, with no transparency.

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[–] Daryl 4 points 2 days ago (2 children)

How can this post created in the 'Canada' community be cross posted into the 'Canada' community? Somehow the same post got 'created' twice in the same community.

[–] ragepaw 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Because you are not the customer. It doesn't score for you, it scores the potential a lender can make money off of you.

[–] Daryl 3 points 1 day ago

Your response to my post makes absolutely no sense, unless you are a chatbot. My post has nothing to do with credit or a credit report, it has to do with a glitch in the coding of Lemmy itself. Two identical posts - posted at the same time by the same person using exactly the same URL and heading.