Driving around in search of deals and discounts this weekend can use up a lot of gas.
But the simple act of filling up at the pump can make even the most astute among us a sitting duck for a crook with an illegal card skimmer.
Skimmers are usually attached to a gas pump in such a way that makes them nearly impossible for a customer to detect.
Ed Bides with Florida Capital Bank said although it鈥檚 hard to tell the difference, there is a way.
Motorists can now use the Bluetooth function on their cell phone to find out if a pump鈥檚 credit card scanner has been corrupted.
鈥淲hat you would do is go ahead and on your phone go into the settings and start your bluetooth. And when it does a scan, if you notice that a device pops up that has a long stream of numbers and letters, probably about 10-to-15 digits long, there is a card skimmer that鈥檚 on the pump,鈥 said Bides. Or, it could mean there is a skimmer on a nearby pump.
Bides said the reason this works is because the crook is also using Bluetooth in order to transmit and collect a customer鈥檚 credit card information.
He also suggests doing a bluetooth scan before getting money out of an ATM.
If you do detect an illegal card skimmer, Bides recommends reporting it to the gas station attendant or the bank.
You can hear Bides鈥 full interview on .
Contact reporter Cyd Hoskinson at choskinson@wjct.org, 904-358-6351 and on Twitter .
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