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Chip Cards (Smart Cards)
What is CHIP and PIN? (CHIP Cards & PIN numbers)

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What is a CHIP?
It's a small computer chip that can be seen on the front of a modern
debit or credit card - sometimes known as a SMART card |
What is a PIN number?
A PIN number is your Personal Identification Number. It
is the secret code number you choose for your card
that enables you to access your money or perform banking transactions through
the ATM as well as make purchases without signing a sales receipt at merchants
that have PIN pads. Never share your PIN with anyone and never write it down.
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So what's this CHIP & PIN?
- Visa, MasterCard and Europay agreed to define an
international payment standard known as EMV to ensure payment cards can be
used everywhere they are used today
- As far back as 1998, Visa laid out a clear
framework and a seven-year timetable for the European migration to EMV chip
- Visa EU has provided a £100 million chip
migration fund as part of a package of support for banks, retailers and
vendors to help them implement chip and PIN
- Of the 120 million payment cards in issue in the
UK, over 58 percent are Visa cards
- The majority of Visa cards will be chip cards
with PIN verification by 2005
Credit Card
Industry facts
- A chip and PIN trial started in Spring 2003, in
Northampton, for three months, with participating card issuers and retailers
- The industry is spending over £1 billion to
migrate to chip and PIN but it is anticipated that the new cards will repay
the investment
- The European Commission estimates that chip and
PIN will save banks and retailers over £412 million annually
- Fraud costs the UK more than £1m a day
- A fraudulent transaction takes place every 20
seconds
- Without action card fraud is projected to rise
to £800m a year by 2005
Consumer facts (according to Visa research)
- 78% of cardholders think the introduction of PIN
is a positive step
- 69% of cardholders value the added security that
the introduction of PIN at the point of sale will bring
- 52% of people think that typing in a PIN when
using a card to pay for goods will help reduce fraud
Chip Credit & Debit Cards
- By the end of 2004 the majority of credit and
debit cards in the UK and most of Europe will be chip cards. These will
contain a small computer chip that can securely store data to identify both
the card and the cardholder.
- The chip can hold the card’s data so securely
that it cannot feasibly be copied or altered.
- By 2005 the majority of cardholders paying with
a credit or debit card will enter a PIN into a card terminal to verify their
identity, rather than by signing a receipt.
- A transaction using a chip card with a PIN will
be very simple. Cardholders will be familiar with the process, which
requires them to input a 4 digit PIN when paying for goods.
Why is it happening?
- Chip and PIN is the solution to the rising cost
of counterfeit, lost and stolen and intercepted card fraud in the UK.
- The chip prevents the card from being
counterfeited and the PIN uniquely identifies the owner of the card and
prevents a lost or stolen card being used by someone else. If a card is
reported lost or stolen, the issuing bank will ‘lock’ the chip on the card.
- In time, chip and PIN will also lead to faster
transaction times and shorter queues, due to removing the need to sign and
verify the receipt.
- A more comprehensive audit trail of the card
transaction is provided, allowing cardholders, merchants and banks to better
determine whether transactions were genuine or fraudulent.
Who is involved?
- The entire banking industry is involved
including Visa and APACS (Association of Payments and Clearing Systems) and
their member banks, the BRC (British Retail Consortium), all retailers and
cardholders.
- Visa, MasterCard and Europay agreed to define an
international payment standard known as EMV to ensure payment cards can be
used globally.
When is it coming?
- Cardholders will be sent a new chip card and PIN
by their bank either when their card is ready for renewal or by the end of
2004.
- For the foreseeable future, all Visa chip cards
will continue to carry a magnetic stripe, so there’s no need to worry - even
if your card has a chip on it but the retailer does not have a chip
terminal, your card will still be accepted using the magnetic stripe just as
it has been previously. Participants in the Northampton trial will receive
cards over the coming months in time for the start of the trial.
Northampton Trial
- There will be a trial to make sure chip and PIN
is a success when it’s rolled out nationally.
- The technology has already been successfully
tested, so the trial will make sure that people receive the right
communications and understand what to do with their cards at the point of
sale.
- New cards will be issued to the many participating Northampton
cardholders by their banks and they will be issued with a PIN. They will
receive details from their card issuer about what to do.
- Many Northampton retailers including some very
well known high street names (Dixons, ESSO, Focus, Marks & Spencer,
Sainsbury’s, Spar, Tesco, Texaco, Total etc) have committed to installing
the technology capable of accepting PIN authorisation at the point of sale.
The Visa Cardholder Experience
- Cardholders, apart from those in Northampton,
don’t need to do anything yet.
- By 2004 the majority of payment cards will carry
a chip and cardholders will each be issued with a unique PIN from their
issuing bank.
- From 2004 Visa cardholders will be able to
change their issued PIN at most UK ATMs
- Cardholders will receive regular communications
both directly from their bank and more widely from the industry as a whole
to explain the change and ensure they know what to do.
- Essentially, PIN will replace a signature at
point of sale .
- Typically, the card is inserted into the chip terminal. The cardholder
then checks the amount on the terminal is correct and discretely enters
their PIN. The card remains in the terminal for the duration of the
transaction, which will be verified and completed in seconds. The card is
then removed and the sales receipt given to the cardholder.
How do we know it will work?
- France introduced a domestic chip-based PIN
system in 1993 and during the first full year in which every French payment
card carried a chip, total losses halved and domestic counterfeit fell by
78%.
- By 1996 counterfeit had effectively vanished
(according to the French national bank card association, Cartes Bancaires)
and by 1998, banks were saving the equivalent of 0.1% of sales volume on
fraud alone.
- France has committed to upgrading its current
system to be compatible with the EMV specifications by 2005.
What is EMV?
EMV is the industry abbreviation for the consortium of three companies who
created a joint working group in 1994 (Europay International, MasterCard
International, Visa International) jointly sponsoring the global standard for
electronic financial transactions. It also refers to the technical
specifications produced by that consortium and adopted by all three companies
designed to ensure the global interoperability of chip cards, chip terminals,
financial messages and related services.
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