Brad Keeton wrote:A lot of Louisville restaurants take credit card numbers to hold reservations on big days. I've experienced it at probably 5 or 6 different restaurants over the past few years for Oaks night and New Years Eve. I will give the information, but only after being very clear about the cancellation policy. Generally it's been my experience that you only get charged if you're a no-show, and it's usually a $30 charge or something in that range.
Yes, there's always a risk in giving your credit card information out, but this situation is probably no more risky than handing it to a server that whisks it away for 5 or 10 minutes, buying something online, letting a hotel run it for incidentals, or giving it to the Boombozz guy taking your delivery order. I wouldn't sweat it, really.
I diagree to an extent. That server has 5 to 10 minutes to write down your information and/or use your card. If this information is being written in the actual reservation book then the employees (all of them, not just one server) have at least until Thanksgiving to access the information, if not until that reservation book is no longer being used. And then you have to wonder if they destroy the book properly.
There's a reason the credit card transaction receipts no longer include your whole CC number, much less the other magical information (exp. date and security code).
That would be a no-go for me.
Thinks the frosty mug is the low point in American history.