
February 25th 12, 08:47 PM
posted to uk.railway,uk.transport.london,misc.transport.rail.americas
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Sep 2004
Posts: 724
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cards, was E-ZPass, was CharlieCards v.v. Oyster (and Octopus?)
On Sat, 25 Feb 2012 16:24:49 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote:
In message , at 16:06:24 on Sat, 25 Feb
2012, Adam H. Kerman remarked:
No, UK credit cards also have a magnetic stripe on the back, so they can
be swiped through a US retail terminal. You just have to sign on the
transaction, rather than use your PIN.
That's interesting. In the UK, do you use the PIN both when swiping
Almost no-one swipes cards any more, they are fitted into a chip reader.
In both cases you'd need a PIN, unless it's one of those intangible
purchases like a parking garage, where they seem to have decided that
the cost of doing PIN verification is greater than the potential fraud
from skimmed cards (and the product has a zero marginal costs anyway).
and using it as a proximity card?
I'm told about 1:10 proximity card transactions require a PIN. Whether
it's random, or by profiling the retailer/customer, I doubt is in the
public domain.
http://conversation.which.co.uk/mone...tactless-card/
refers to a PIN being used for any transaction over 15 UKP or any
taking the running daily total over 50 UKP.
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