reply to above edited comment
Incorrect on all fronts.
First: We are asking if there was information stolen, why try it again. We never implied about about your marriage.
Second: Its not impossible but very highly improbable.
Third: We have been nothing but professional with you as we explained about googlepay the first time we talked.
Hi John,
Thanks for the review. I remember speaking with you as you used googlepay for your order. We explained how there is no way the processor would have "stolen" your info as googlepay doesnt even send your card info through the merchant, see googlepay info below. You claim the info was stolen through the processor but your wife decided to try it a week later?
Here is how Google Pay protects your information:
Tokenization: Instead of transmitting your actual credit or debit card number, Google Pay uses a process called tokenization. A unique virtual account number (token) is generated for each transaction, rendering the data useless if intercepted by a third party.
Encryption: All your payment information and activity are stored securely with industry-leading encryption on Google's private servers.
Authentication: To make payments, you must unlock your device using a screen lock (PIN, pattern, password, fingerprint, or Face ID). This prevents an unauthorized person from using your phone to make purchases, even if it is stolen.
Fraud Protection: Google Pay has manual and automatic anti-fraud protocols in place that monitor for suspicious activity 24/7. You also retain all the consumer protection policies offered by your bank or card issuer.
Privacy: Google Pay does not sell your personal information or transaction history to third parties for advertising purposes.