
I know that the housing market has us all pretty tense, but who knew it would carry over to Monopoly?


 When it's freecreditreport.com.  Yeah, the commercials are cute and that darn jingle just sticks in your head.  "Free Credit Report dot com, tell your friends, tell your dad, tell your mom..."  But freecreditreport.com (notice I won't hyperlink it for you) is free in the very minimal definition of the word.  You get one free report from one credit bureau one time once in your life.  After that, it's all about the sales pitch.  The government website, www.annualcreditreport.com (this one I will link for you), is where you go to get a free credit report from all three credit bureaus once every 12 months.  You get the full report, minus the actual score.  To get the score, each bureau charges around $5.  So tell me, do you want the sizzle or do you want the steak?
When it's freecreditreport.com.  Yeah, the commercials are cute and that darn jingle just sticks in your head.  "Free Credit Report dot com, tell your friends, tell your dad, tell your mom..."  But freecreditreport.com (notice I won't hyperlink it for you) is free in the very minimal definition of the word.  You get one free report from one credit bureau one time once in your life.  After that, it's all about the sales pitch.  The government website, www.annualcreditreport.com (this one I will link for you), is where you go to get a free credit report from all three credit bureaus once every 12 months.  You get the full report, minus the actual score.  To get the score, each bureau charges around $5.  So tell me, do you want the sizzle or do you want the steak?  
 I completed an e-sign on Friday.  At first, the borrower's spouse thought an e-sign sounded kind of cool.  By the end of it, she was not so impressed.  Trying to read their note on a laptop wasn't very easy.  The county was wrong on a few docs but we couldn't make the corrections.  She wanted a hard copy of the online docs, which meant she'd have to print them out herself after the signing.  But near the end of the signing she asked me a very interesting question.  "What real proof is there that my husband and I are really here doing the e-sign and clicking through all these documents?  You could just sit at home and click through all of this without us being here, couldn't you."  Umm, good point.  I hope most borrowers would realize when they signed the hard copy docs that certain docs were missing, such as the note.  But how do you prove anything?  Will e-signs stand up in court?
I completed an e-sign on Friday.  At first, the borrower's spouse thought an e-sign sounded kind of cool.  By the end of it, she was not so impressed.  Trying to read their note on a laptop wasn't very easy.  The county was wrong on a few docs but we couldn't make the corrections.  She wanted a hard copy of the online docs, which meant she'd have to print them out herself after the signing.  But near the end of the signing she asked me a very interesting question.  "What real proof is there that my husband and I are really here doing the e-sign and clicking through all these documents?  You could just sit at home and click through all of this without us being here, couldn't you."  Umm, good point.  I hope most borrowers would realize when they signed the hard copy docs that certain docs were missing, such as the note.  But how do you prove anything?  Will e-signs stand up in court?