this post was submitted on 08 May 2025
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Not sure if all banks work that way, but I do have a way for you to solve the problem with anybody who is doing that.
In the United States, you can go down to the local post office and fill out a small form. That form lists exactly who lives there. The Post Office puts that form into an optical reader software and all mail that goes through the distribution plant gets read by an optical reader.
So for example let’s say that you lived at
872 3rd St. S.
And I tried to mail a letter to
John Stevens
872 3rd St. S.
If you don’t have John Stevens wrote on that form that you gave to the post office, the optical reader will immediately reject that letter and send it to whoever sent it. You will never see any mail other than what is addressed to you.
Make sure that everybody who lives at that address is wrote on that form. I would also write down anybody who realistically might be getting mail there. So for example, let’s say your mom intends to have a letter sent to your house for her even though she doesn’t live with you you’d wanna make sure her name is on that form.
Now the bank tries to send stuff out for this other person and the bank gets it right back.
Wait a second. I get junk mail all the time and when I used to call to opt out, the sender would just change the name to "current resident" and send it anyway. Are you telling me this would solve that?
Sadly. No.
They will deliver "current resident" mail.
I tried arguing with them that my name wasn't "Current Resident" it went about as well as expected... lol
In Canada you can opt out of spam, with the exception of political spam.
I don’t live in a first world country. I live in the US. They are trying to sell the post office to Amazon right now.