Your card number is not the abstraction for preventing charges you signed up for from getting charged, that’s what cancelling the subscriptions are for. And if you have evidence of that a dispute(usually an email to customer support is enough to do that).
You are using the wrong tool for the job and getting upset that it doesn’t work they way you want it to.
Under the bonnet, card hosts like Base2000 have an underlying account number for the credit facility, and various PANs (card numbers) are attached to that. Even if a singular card is cancelled, transactions posted in batch can be routed to the appropriate credit facility as the host knows all current and past PANs.
If you have subscriptions that are difficult to cancel, the best path is to ask your bank to block and/or dispute the transactions in question. Getting a new card with a new PAN may not be sufficient.
Also, sometimes getting a new credit card will still have the same number, just a new expiration date and security code.
Also take note that a recognized payments processor using the bank's api does not need to prove anything when they create a new recurrent payment on your account. They can do so at will. The bank relies solely on you noticing and disputing that claim. Services that consult you in becoming such a processor stress this as a 'feature' accompanied by abundant nudges and winks.
This process does not have any protections for card holders. It was designed probably to benefit merchants from customers that change cards with unpaid bills, but is marketed as convenience (you change your card and don’t hav to worry about updating it everywhere).
I think this should be better regulated. Not every merchant type should have access to this. I can see utilities and rent maybe, but there should still be a process to opt out.
That's an issue between me and the merchant. I don't want MY bank acting as an enabler for the merchant over my wishes, with my money.
Based on the brief detail provided, I think OP's mistake was to cancel/reissue the card rather than dispute the charge / block the merchant.
I’m really struggling to explain this with anything other than that it’s designed to create situations like OP’s.
They also provide ability to pause card after which no transaction would go through.
What kind of charges? Did you cancel the subscriptions, disputed them with the bank? Sometimes I read advice to "just cancel the card" instead of proper cancelling a subscription.
>magically reroutes to new card numbers no matter how complicated the change
>out $500
I don't need to play 20 Questions to know you're talking about legalzoom
Closed my account and moved on.