Canada’s 6-Month Chip-and-PIN Delay Caused By “Very High (Transaction) Failure Rates,” Says RCC
Written by Frank Hayes and Evan SchumanSeptember 30th, 2010
Pushed by "very high (transaction) failure rates," Visa and MasterCard have simultaneously granted Canadian retailers a six-month extension on a key Chip-and-PIN move. The change was announced just weeks before the card brands planned to shift a critical liability. That liability would have made retailers fully accountable for fraud if they chose to not use the card chips and to instead use the older mag-stripe. The delay is quite significant. Following the U.K.'s shift to Chip-and-PIN back in 2004, Canada's efforts have been watched closely by retailers in other countries—especially the U.S.—where Wal-Mart has been strongly pushing for national adoption.
Critics of Chip-and-PIN have raised questions about whether EMV is honestly that much more secure than mag-stripe. These concerns mushroomed back in February when a Cambridge University report publicly detailed many security holes in the current implementation. Even worse, some have suggested the U.S. shouldn't embrace Chip-and-PIN because it will likely be years-beyond-obsolete by the time it's fully launched.
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4 Comments | Read Canada’s 6-Month Chip-and-PIN Delay Caused By “Very High (Transaction) Failure Rates,” Says RCC
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September 30th, 2010 at 8:52 am
How come you do not talk about France’s experience with that type of cards? They have been the ones coming up with the chip and been using it since the 80s. I think it is very reassuring that when you go to a restaurant for example you do not have to loose your card from your site when paying as it happens here but the waiter comes to the table with the reader.
Why do we have to reinvent things all the time just like healthcare?
October 1st, 2010 at 1:55 pm
EMV transactions are processed daily around the world. Given the goal of increasing systemic security, taking the time to investigate the reported problem is prudent. Also, to put it into context, we are changing an entire country’s payment system at the point of sale and that takes significant time. This six month extension is only 1/12th of the initial time lines.
October 1st, 2010 at 9:29 pm
The technical difficulties along with the rule ambiguities mentioned by Mike Beazley will create further groundswell for delaying the liability shift. If the card schemes would simply reduce interchange fees for chip-and-pin transactions, everyone would be pushing their IT staff to convert asap. Won’t the reduced income from reduced fees be more than offset by the inevitable reduction in fraud? If not, why are we being told to convert?
October 19th, 2010 at 12:20 pm
We recently returned from a trip to the United Kingdom and discovered, much to our surprise, many retail operations that would not accept our American credit cards because they were not “Chip and PIN” cards. This was particularly true in grocery stores, but also ran into it at one large department store in Ireland. As more organizations take this position you have to wonder what will happen to travel to Europe if Americans can’t use the debit/credit cards!