I have two completely separate debit card accounts with the same company, I needed a new PIN issued to me on one of the accounts. It arrived this morning and when I revealed the new PIN I was shocked to see that it was exactly the same PIN that I use for the other account. This raises a few questions, What are the odds on a random generated PIN being issued that is the same as the one that I'm already using on a different account ? Given that I'm (allegedly) the only person to know my PIN's, not even the banking company, this cannot be a mix up between accounts. Also given the vast amount of possible combinations of the four digits surely this cannot be passed off as just a coincidence ? I'm beginning to go down the 'sinister' route simply because the odds on being issued the exact same PIN as the other card seem way too big for my thinking.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Khgg-mJUB-0
If you start with 0000 then 0001,0002 etc.
Then 0010,0011 etc.
Then once you've finished starting with 0 you then start with 1000,1001 etc.
Surely there must be more than 10000 permutations by the time you even get to a number beginning with a 9.