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An On-Off Card Patent
Written by Evan Schuman
October 2, 2008
A U.S. Patent for a payment card that can be turned on and off was issued last year with little fanfare, but it's owners are now starting to shop it around to retailers and banks. The premise is that when the consumer turns off the card, neither the card nor its associated numbers can be used for any purchases.
If it works, this could represent a different payment data strategy, because it would make the card data useless to a thief. The full Patent description also discusses how a mobile phone can be integrated into the process for additional payment authorizations. That phone would alert the consumer if someone tried using the card.
It's not clear whether the business plan will fly, though, given that each card costs about $6, the only retailer the company says it's talking with is Target and there are only 18,000 current cardholders, according to Nancy M. Torosian, CFO for Assured Debit Card LLC. But it is a novel approach to payment card security. That Patent makes for interesting reading. |
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Evan Schuman is the former retail technology editor for eWEEK.com, PCMagazine, CIOInsight and retail reporter for RISNews and Consumer Goods Technology. Having covered IT issues for 21 years - and other stuff like legal affairs, politics, Wall Street and the environment for about eight years before that - Schuman is in a good position to gripe about technology trends and sometimes accidentally make a good point.
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Sears.com Melts Down On Black Friday, But Costco, Walmart, Saks and Kmart Have Issues, Too
Sears.com suffered the worst Web problems on Black Friday (Nov. 28), experiencing a series of complete site crashes for much of the day. Although no other major retailer came close, according to preliminary reports, many of the industry's largest merchants suffered site slowdowns or other Web problems, including Walmart, Kmart, Saks, Overstock, Amazon, Target, Kohl's, Costco and Buy.com.
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