San Francisco Business Times | Sep 13, 2010

Debt down, but so are credit scores

San Francisco-based Credit Karma, which tracks such things, blamed this quixotic circumstance on "a strange mix of economic conditions."

Kansas City Business Journal | Sep 12, 2010

Report: Kansas City credit scores improve

"This month's data succinctly illustrates the correlation between debt and credit score," CreditKarma CEO Ken Lin said in a release. "Consumers have charged more on their credit cards and as a result, credit scores are lower. We suspect as consumers begin to pay down their debts, credit scores will start to increase again."

USA Today | Sep 10, 2010

Credit card use plunges as hard times drag on, debit use rises

Many banks are responding to the trend [payment volume for debit cards exceeded credit cards] by adding rewards programs and other features to their debit cards, says Ken Lin, chief executive of Credit Karma, a website that provides free credit scores.

Today Show | Sep 8, 2010

Today’s Money

Today Show mentions Credit Karma in their segment, Today's Money.

The Christian Science Monitor | Aug 26, 2010

Perfect credit: Being too perfect can cost you

"There's obviously a benefit from [reaching] the 750 range," says Ken Lin, CEO of Credit Karma, a credit-score disclosure company based in San Francisco. But "once you hit that pricing tier, there really is no benefit" to a higher score.

Consumerism Commentary | Aug 24, 2010

My Credit Score is Stuck At Good

I am a supporter of CreditKarma.com, a free service that shows you your TransUnion credit score, among other things, as many times as you want.

DoughRoller | Aug 23, 2010

How To Get Your Free Credit Score Without A Credit Card

Credit Karma provides you with a credit report card (not credit report) and your credit score as calculated by TransUnion. One of the nice features is that the report card explains those factors that are either helping or hurting your credit score.

Sign On San Diego | Aug 23, 2010

Banks are promoting credit cards again

"The shareholders at the large banks that issue the cards are looking for continuing revenue growth, and when you take away $22 billion they make on fees, they'll look for another way to make it up," said Ken Lin, who heads Credit Karma.