Security :-
A smart card, combining credit card and debit card
properties. The 3 by 5 mm security chip embedded
in the card is shown enlarged in the inset. The
gold contact pads on the card enable electronic
access to the chip.
The low security of the credit card system presents
countless opportunities for fraud. This opportunity
has created a huge black market in stolen credit
card numbers, which are generally used quickly before
the cards are reported stolen.
The goal of the credit card companies, as they say,
is not to eliminate fraud, but to "reduce it
to manageable levels", such that the total
cost of both fraud and fraud prevention is minimized.
This implies that high-cost low-return fraud prevention
measures will not be used if their cost exceeds
the potential gains from fraud reduction.
Most Internet fraud is done through the use of stolen
credit card information which is obtained in many
ways, the simplest being copying information from
retailers, either online or offline. There have
been many cases of crackers obtaining huge quantities
of credit card information from company databases.
It is not unusual for employees of companies that
deal with millions of customers to sell credit card
information to criminals.
Despite efforts to improve security for remote purchases
using credit cards, systems with security holes
are usually the result of poor implementations of
card acquisition by merchants. For example, a website
that uses SSL to encrypt card numbers from a client
may simply email the number from the webserver to
someone who manually processes the card details
at a card terminal. Naturally, anywhere card details
become human-readable before being processed at
the acquiring bank is a security risk. However,
many banks offer systems such as ClearCommerce,
where encrypted card details captured on a merchant's
webserver can be sent directly to the payment processor.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is the agency
responsible for prosecuting criminals who engage
in credit card fraud in the United States, but they
do not have the resources to pursue all criminals.
In general, they only prosecute in cases exceeding
US$5,000 in value. Three improvements to card security
have been introduced to the more common credit card
networks but none has proven to help reduce credit
card fraud so far. First, the on-line verification
system used by merchants is being enhanced to require
a 4 digit Personal Identification Number (PIN) known
only to the card holder. Second, the cards themselves
are being replaced with similar-looking tamper-resistant
smart cards which are intended to make forgery more
difficult. The majority of smartcard (IC card) based
credit cards comply with the EMV (Europay MasterCard
Visa) standard. Third, an additional 3 or 4 digit
code is now present on the back of most cards, for
use in "card not present" transactions.
See CVV2 for more information.
