added 2007 Mon May 7 2:26:27 by TechnologyExpert
On May 1 Cathy Busby was sucked into the housing crisis sweeping the U.S. She is not alone: the American dream of home ownership is turning sour for many. Up to 2,000,000 people with subprime mortgages have already had their homes repossessed, or will default on their loans in the coming months, according to industry estimates.
On May 1 Cathy Busby was sucked into the housing crisis sweeping the U.S. She is not alone: the American dream of home ownership is turning sour for many. Up to 2,000,000 people with subprime mortgages have already had their homes repossessed, or will default on their loans in the coming months, according to industry estimates.
added 2007 Tue Apr 17 10:54:35 by gatitabonitasen
The chairman of the Senate education committee urged the Bush administration yesterday to block student loan companies from accessing a national database that holds confidential information on tens of millions of students. The request by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), came after The Washington Post reported on inappropriate searches of the da
The chairman of the Senate education committee urged the Bush administration yesterday to block student loan companies from accessing a national database that holds confidential information on tens of millions of students. The request by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), came after The Washington Post reported on inappropriate searches of the da
added 2007 Mon Apr 16 5:35:06 by Beau7890
Some lending companies with access to a national database that contains confidential information on tens of millions of student borrowers have repeatedly searched it in ways that violate federal rules, raising alarms about data mining and abuse of privacy, government and university officials said.
Some lending companies with access to a national database that contains confidential information on tens of millions of student borrowers have repeatedly searched it in ways that violate federal rules, raising alarms about data mining and abuse of privacy, government and university officials said.
added 2007 Mon Jan 15 22:18:07 by Neophile
Consumer advocates say loosened standards are putting more people at risk as loans originally designed for sophisticated individuals are being marketed to far-less-savvy borrowers.
Consumer advocates say loosened standards are putting more people at risk as loans originally designed for sophisticated individuals are being marketed to far-less-savvy borrowers.








