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#701
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In message , at 06:14:17 on
Fri, 2 Mar 2012, Charles Ellson remarked: ATM cards don't necessarily have a (visible?) number (apart from the account name or number) if they are neither credit nor debit cards. My ATM card says on the back in small print "This is not a credit card". The BIN is 6319-2, which is missing from the lists at bin-iin.com But my Debit Card doesn't say that it's not a credit card (nor does an Amex Charge Card, I expect). -- Roland Perry |
#702
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My ATM card says on the back in small print "This is not a credit card".
The BIN is 6319-2, which is missing from the lists at bin-iin.com The general numbering system was set up long ago. I happen to have a copy here of ANSI X4.13-1983 which says that numbers starting with 3 are for travel and entertainment, 4 and 5 are for banking institutions, 6 is retail merchandising. Discover cards have 6XXX numbers, presumably since they were originally spun out of Sears. In all cases, the lasr number is a check digit, computed using a secret formula known only to people who know how to type "Luhn" into Google. For cards starting with 3, the 3XXX identifies the issuer. All 37XX numbers are AmEx, but they subdivide that by card type and currency. For Visa cards, 4XXXX XX identifies the issuer. Master Card issuer numbers are variable length, 51X, 52XX, 53XXX, or 5NXXXX where N is not 1, 2, or 3. Most banks use multiple issuer numbers, both because they issue different kinds of cards and because the big ones issue more cards than fit in one range. Dunno why yours would have a 6 number other than that buying a range of numbers from whoever runs 6xxx was cheaper than from Master card or Visa. My HSBC UK debit card used to have a 6 number (which worked in card terminals in the US, I tried it) but they have since switched to Visa numbers, likely so that they're usable at places in the US that only do signature transactions. But to return to the original point of this exercise, to get free train travel, buy a $20 Visa gift card for cash at the supermarket, and use it on the train. (Do they even have gift cards in the UK? If so, make it a 20 quid gift card.) Until you've bought $20 worth of tickets, it works normally, and the ticket price is deducted from your balance when the transaction clears. After that, the bank rejects the transaction, but if the guard's ticket machine doesn't validate in real time, by the time that happens you're long gone, and since the card is a bearer instrument, they have no way to know who to go after. Repeat indefinitely until the expiration date on the card. Knowing the BIN ranges of debit cards and gift cards doesn't help here, since many of them are entirely valid and the train company will get paid. R's, John -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly |
#703
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Roland Perry wrote:
I've just received a replacement Barclaycard 'Platinum' and it's made from plain white plastic. What's that all about? Maybe they are sulking because it's a Mastercard not VISA? (Note to USA subscribers: for a generation, Barclaycard and VISA were synonymous in the UK.) Somebody didn't let someone win at golf? |
#704
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In message , at 14:39:53 on Fri, 2 Mar
2012, John Levine remarked: In all cases, the lasr number is a check digit, computed using a secret formula known only to people who know how to type "Luhn" into Google. When I was working in mail order we wanted to be able to checksum card numbers handwritten on orders, or taken over the phone. We knew there was a checksum, but the companies refused to tell us (this was decades before Google, naturally). So we pooled our company AMEX cards on the table, which of course had quite a lot of digits in common, and had cracked it in about five minutes. Then, as we suspected, the same algorithm worked for the rest. But to return to the original point of this exercise, to get free train travel, buy a $20 Visa gift card for cash at the supermarket, and use it on the train. (Do they even have gift cards in the UK? If so, make it a 20 quid gift card.) There are lots of gift cards, but to be honest I've never thought they might be numbered like credit cards. They are branded to particular stores or chains. And then there were pre-pay charge cards about five or six years ago, which think got scrapped because they were too easy for money launderers to move money internationally with. Their charges were a bit steep as well. Until you've bought $20 worth of tickets, it works normally, and the ticket price is deducted from your balance when the transaction clears. After that, the bank rejects the transaction, but if the guard's ticket machine doesn't validate in real time, by the time that happens you're long gone, and since the card is a bearer instrument, they have no way to know who to go after. Repeat indefinitely until the expiration date on the card. Knowing the BIN ranges of debit cards and gift cards doesn't help here, since many of them are entirely valid and the train company will get paid. The train companies already don't accept Solo and Electron[1], because they (the train companies) don't have online verification, so they'd just add those sorts of cards to that list. [1] Debit cards for accounts with no overdraft facilities and/or impoverished customers, like students, and under-18's. -- Roland Perry |
#705
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John Levine wrote:
But to return to the original point of this exercise, to get free train travel, buy a $20 Visa gift card for cash at the supermarket, and use it on the train. (Do they even have gift cards in the UK? If so, make it a 20 quid gift card.) Until you've bought $20 worth of tickets, it works normally, and the ticket price is deducted from your balance when the transaction clears. After that, the bank rejects the transaction, but if the guard's ticket machine doesn't validate in real time, by the time that happens you're long gone, and since the card is a bearer instrument, they have no way to know who to go after. Repeat indefinitely until the expiration date on the card. Knowing the BIN ranges of debit cards and gift cards doesn't help here, since many of them are entirely valid and the train company will get paid. Stephen raised the spectre of gift cards to dispute the point I made that card types were known by number ranges, so you just need the list of known closed accounts when using a hand-held point of sale device carried by the conductor, given that authorization won't be convenient or possible when using these devices. Even you agree that yes, these are issued in known number ranges. If the transaction with a gift card cannot be authorized in certain circumstances, then don't accept it in those circumstances. Similarly, they're not going to accept cards issued by merchants to give credit to their own customers for purchases at their own store, like gasoline credit cards. The accounts are issued in different ranges. This Web page discusses payment methods that also apply to paying on train: http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/times_...t_methods.html Credit/Debit/Charge Cards All National Rail train companies accept the major cards such as Visa, Visa Delta, MasterCard, Maestro and Amex. Some train companies also accept Diners Club International, Solo and Electron. Nothing on this page says that gift cards are accepted. Gosh. They must know the card number ranges! So many followups later, Stephen's point was a non-issue, but I won't likely live long enough till he withdraws it. |
#706
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Roland Perry wrote:
There are lots of gift cards, but to be honest I've never thought they might be numbered like credit cards. They are branded to particular stores or chains. In the US, gift cards have evolved over the past few years. They used to be issued by the store in question and may or may not have had a proprietary account number embossed/recorded. A few years ago, the major card issuers became aware of the market and decided they wanted a peice of the float/lost card funds and started issuing gift cards on behalf of the retailers. Now days, they are essentially prepaid debit cards. Depending on the card, they can be restricted to a particular store, chain of stores, or used anywhere a credit card is accepted. |
#707
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(Note to USA subscribers: for a generation, Barclaycard and VISA were
synonymous in the UK.) I recall some of my early trips to the UK, attempting use use a Mastercard, getting a puzzled look from the clerk and having to say "Just process it like a Eurocard". |
#708
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On 02-Mar-12 08:39, John Levine wrote:
Dunno why yours would have a 6 number other than that buying a range of numbers from whoever runs 6xxx was cheaper than from Master card or Visa. One of the reasons for the 3/4/5/6 distinction is that, before the advent of modern card processors, a merchant would have to decode the card number to figure out which network to call for authorization and submit the charge to. They could only process card types they knew and from networks they had an existing relationship with. 4/5 cards were easy to deal with because only the first number needed to be examined, which is why Visa and Mastercard are so widely accepted. 3 cards are only slightly more difficult. 6 cards, though, were generally only accepted at the particular merchant that issued them. An ATM machine might have only understood the particular 6 ranges used by a handful of ATM networks. My HSBC UK debit card used to have a 6 number (which worked in card terminals in the US, I tried it) Today, things are totally different. Merchants send all transactions to the same card processor, regardless of card number, and it's up to the processor to route it to the right network and issuing bank. It's then up to the issuing bank to decide whether to accept a charge from the merchant in question. Sears card, for instance, started accepting charges from any merchant, rather than just Sears stores, and rebranded themselves Discover. Ditto for many other 6 issuers. However, many 6 issuers still only accept charges from particular merchants for various commercial reasons. but they have since switched to Visa numbers, likely so that they're usable at places in the US that only do signature transactions. 6 numbers work just fine in the US for signature transactions; Discover has worked that way for a long time. Until you've bought $20 worth of tickets, it works normally, and the ticket price is deducted from your balance when the transaction clears. After that, the bank rejects the transaction, but if the guard's ticket machine doesn't validate in real time, by the time that happens you're long gone, and since the card is a bearer instrument, they have no way to know who to go after. Repeat indefinitely until the expiration date on the card. Knowing the BIN ranges of debit cards and gift cards doesn't help here, since many of them are entirely valid and the train company will get paid. Exactly my point. 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 |
#709
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Credit/Debit/Charge Cards
All National Rail train companies accept the major cards such as Visa, Visa Delta, MasterCard, Maestro and Amex. Some train companies also accept Diners Club International, Solo and Electron. Nothing on this page says that gift cards are accepted. Gosh. They must know the card number ranges! The gift cards at my supermarket are AmEx and Visa branded. More likely there aren't enough prepaid cards in the UK for National Rail to have noticed. Maybe I'll send one to Roland and he can see if he can buy a train ticket with it. R's, John -- Regards, John Levine, , Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly |
#710
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Stephen Sprunk wrote:
On 02-Mar-12 08:39, John Levine wrote: Knowing the BIN ranges of debit cards and gift cards doesn't help here, since many of them are entirely valid and the train company will get paid. Exactly my point. John Levine did not support your point, dude. If a merchant has a reason to have a policy not to accept the gift cards because authorizations cannot be obtained during a very brief transaction, he can avoid these cards due to known number ranges. Even John Levine agreed that the number ranges were known. You have yet to own up to it. It's a non-issue. |
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