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When retailers started making card-swipes a customer function, it saved a few seconds of a cashier’s time. But are retailers paying for that efficiency boost with a higher risk for fraud? The head of the National Retail Federation’s fraud prevention effort says yes. “In today’s environment, the card is swiped by a consumer and it’s never seen by the cashier,” said Joe LaRocca, the NRF VP for loss prevention. “There’s no way to see the information on the plastic,” he said, and therefore no way to verify identity.” Read more. |
March 6th, 2008 at 6:11 am
I have lived 14 years in France and there, you do not sign for your bank card purchase, you enter your pin on a key pad protected from prying eyes. Wouldn’t be a good idea to do the same here in the States? When I do my grocery, I use my debit card and enter my pin but I always have to protect the reader when entering the numbers because every one can see what I am entering. If we could also have pin usage with credit cards, it would probably reduce the number of frauds in the retail system.