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#561
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On 26/02/2012 21:05, Mark Goodge wrote:
On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 14:09:37 -0600, Stephen Sprunk put finger to keyboard and typed: On 26-Feb-12 12:52, Roland Perry wrote: In , at 18:32:17 on Sun, 26 Feb 2012, Adam H. remarked: What do you do ... at a restaurant, when the tip amount to be charged is not known until later, In a UK restaurant you have to add the tip to the bill before contacting the card company. That's not so very different from my experience in the USA where they give you the bill, with an empty field for the tip, which you hand to the waiter *filled in* (along with your card). The only* way I've ever seen it in the US is this: 1. The waiter presents an itemized bill _without_ a tip line. 2. You either give him cash (including tip) or a card. 3. The waiter swipes the card in the register, which authorizes the card for the bill plus an estimated tip. 4. The waiter returns with the card and two slips showing the subtotal, empty tip line, and empty total line. 5. You fill in the tip and total on the "merchant copy" slip, sign the slip and hand it back to the waiter. You can leave now. (You should also fill the tip and total on the "customer copy" slip, for your own records.) 6. The waiter enters the tip into the register, which updates the credit card transaction with the correct total for when it's posted later. That's completely different to the UK. Here (assuming we're paying by card, not cash), the process is: 1. The waiter hands you the bill without a tip line. 2. You insert your card into a handheld CNP terminal. (Depending on the restaurant, the terminal will either be brought to your table - they are wireless - or you will go to a payment station with your card. Obviously, the more upmarket the restaurant the more likely it is that they'll bring the terminal to you - going to a payment station is more likely in the likes of Pizza Hut). 3. The waiter rings up the total excluding a tip, then hands you the terminal. 4. The terminal now gives you two options: Pay the amount as stated, or add an additional sum. 5. If you choose to add a tip, you enter the amount into the terminal yourself. The terminal then displays a new total. 6. Once you are happy with the amount you are paying, you press the "confirm" button. 7. The terminal then prompts you for your PIN. 8. You enter the PIN, wait a few moments while the transaction is authorised and then the terminal prints a receipt[1]. The receipt includes the amount of the tip. You only enter your PIN once, after the final amount (including tip) has been calculated. And there is only one payment receipt. [1] Or, of course, declines your card or rejects the PIN. In which case, you'd better have an alternative method of paymenht :-) Mark Many places try to put a 12.5% service charge onto the bill now, but that is completely optional and you can request to have it removed. |
#562
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In message , at 19:13:06 on Sun,
26 Feb 2012, Graeme Wall remarked: Tescos in UK have a facility to "Pay at Pump" You insert your credit card and enter PIN and then fill up and drive off. We've covered that in other postings - Tesco (and a multitude of similar vendors) reserve probably £99 when you "log in to" the self-service petrol pump, then make the actual charge when you've finished. -- Roland Perry |
#563
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In message , at 14:30:31 on Sun, 26 Feb
2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: The pumps had a sign suggesting that Electron card users put in at least GBP 20 worth or else a larger amount of the balance on the associated account would remain earmarked for a few days. Sounds like they're authorizing the card for GBP 20, as discussed elsewhere in this thread. Not authorising, because that's "Electron" is a debit card on an account which doesn't allow an overdraft. They will be deducting the £20 straight away, and allowing only up to £20 of fuel. If you buy less, it sometimes takes a while for them to credit it you with the balance. -- Roland Perry |
#564
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Stephen Sprunk wrote:
Some banks still issue real ATM cards on request, but many can't/won't. Spouse just received a letter from her credit union stating that they were replacing all ATM cards with Visa branded debit cards. Something to do with requirements in the recently passed Dodd/Frank Consumer Extortion^H^H^H^H^H^H Protection bill. |
#565
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On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 21:37:44 +0000, Roland Perry put finger to keyboard and
typed: In message , at 13:59:20 on Sun, 26 Feb 2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: Also, at least in the US, ATM cards have been mostly supplanted by debit cards. Some "ATM" cards are really debit cards with a $0 "purchase" limit. Some banks still issue real ATM cards on request, but many can't/won't. Cards that only work in ATMs are almost unknown in the UK. They are usually general purpose debit cards too (and you can get cash advances on credit cards). You can get them on some savings accounts, in order to be able to withdraw cash but not make payments. I've got one that works like that, although I rarely use it. Mark -- Blog: http://mark.goodge.co.uk Stuff: http://www.good-stuff.co.uk |
#566
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On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 10:46:48 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 00:33:53 on Sun, 26 Feb 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: 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. The £50 limit is mentioned in a blog comment, I think I'd like to see the words coming from a bank. £50 sounds a lot like "the average amount you'll run up before meeting a random PIN check". Do any of the banks publish the algorithm? Barclays themselves seem to present it as a random check but various reports/reviews/etc. by third parties on an assortment of dates imply a 50 UKP cumulative "trigger" which presumably does not need all following transactions on the same day to be PINned unless they also trigger any warning signs typical of fraudulent activity. Does the card accumulate a daily total to police this £50 limit? I hadn't heard that. "For example, a pre-set limit for Visa payWave transactions will be set by the card issuer. This limit is automatically reset each time a standard chip and PIN transaction is conducted. If this pre-set limit is ever exceeded, the Visa payWave terminal will automatically ask for a chip and PIN transaction to be conducted." [http://www.visaeurope.com/en/cardhol...ave/faqs.aspx] That does not directly match Barclays's version but does seem to imply that the card "knows" what limit it was last advised. Not being able to balance that against following waved transactions would seem to be a major opportunity to make a series of small transactions before it became necessary or possible to "phone home" again. Unless there is a mobile 'phone connection (or an offline CandP enabled terminal ?) this presumably means you are stuffed if you pass your limit trying to pay on a train or bus. |
#567
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Haven't seen Amex with a proximity card yet, though will be sure to keep
an eye out. I have one in my wallet, issued in the U.S. My UK Amex has no chip at all, but they say that when they send me a new card next month, it'll be chip+pin. -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly |
#568
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On 26-Feb-12 15:35, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 13:33:17 on Sun, 26 Feb 2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: If the charge isn't paid, the merchant isn't paid. Wrong. If the charge is accepted by the issuing bank, the merchant gets paid by their processor, period. What if there's a later chargeback? Chargebacks are debited from the merchant's account with the card processor. If the merchant's account is closed with a negative balance (eg. due to excessive chargebacks), the debt is collected through the usual channels. Note that failure of the consumer to pay their credit card bill does _not_ result in a chargeback, contrary to Adam's ridiculous claims. S -- Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking |
#569
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On 26-Feb-12 15:44, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 13:50:33 on Sun, 26 Feb 2012, Stephen Sprunk remarked: I use credit cards in foreign countries regularly. This was due to it being an electrical retailer without C&P (which you would not expect in the USA anyway), and not either the amount or the location. Did you mean _electronics_ retailer? No really. They sold fridges and washing machines too. Which are hardly "electronics". It's a blurry line. Best Buy, for instance, is classified as an electronics retailer even though they sell home appliances. OTOH, Wal-Mart is _not_ classified as an electronics retailer, even though they probably sell more electronics than Best Buy, because most of their revenue comes from other departments. In the end, what really matters to a card processor is the chargeback rate. Referring to correlations with vague things like "industry" allows generalization when specifics don't really matter. I did think about trying a different card. It probably wouldn't have helped, unless the transaction was flagged by the issuing bank rather than the card processor. It must be flagged by the bank, because banks are the people you are supposed to tell when you go abroad. I doubt they in turn pre-emptively inform every card processor in the part of the world you are travelling to. The card processor would know the identity and nationality of the issuing bank, though, and may have flagged the transaction themselves. And yet I can routinely buy things (expensive as well as cheap) in the UK from electrical retailers, without any referral to the card company. I don't get a "referral" to my bank at US retailers; however, they do ask for photo ID, match it to the name on the card, closely scrutinize my signature and compare it to _both_ my credit card and ID, and get an imprint of the credit card--despite swiping it, which makes an imprint unnecessary at other merchants. It would be a "referral" if they were instructed to do that by the card company on a transaction by transaction basis. I'm not aware of such steps being done on a per-transaction basis, eg. depending on the card number or payment amount. Would they really do all that if you were buying was a $5 pack of AA batteries? In theory, yes; those merchants are required by their card processor to take those steps for _all_ card transactions, and being discovered not doing so could cause their fees to rise or their merchant account to be closed. They'd rather annoy customers and potentially lose that one $5 sale than lose all their (much larger) card sales, which would likely result in bankruptcy. S -- Stephen Sprunk "God does not play dice." --Albert Einstein CCIE #3723 "God is an inveterate gambler, and He throws the K5SSS dice at every possible opportunity." --Stephen Hawking |
#570
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Exactly. I don't know how a restaurant could do an earlier estimated
reservation of funds, when the only time you give the server your card is either at the till on the way out, or at the table when he brings the wireless terminal to you. That would require a significant change to the way US restaurants work. In Canada, where the restaurant culture is pretty much the same as in the U.S., now that they have chip+pin, when you pay, they bring the terminal to you and let you enter the tip before you enter the PIN. It doesn't seem to have been a big deal. I don't see why US restaurants would object, particularly since they'll likely get fewer chargebacks with customer entered PINs and less opportunity for staff to accidentally or deliberately mis-enter the tip. -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly |
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