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USA EMV cards: Availability, Q&A (Chip & PIN -or- Chip & Signature) [2012-2015]

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Old Sep 20, 2013, 11:40 am
FlyerTalk Forums Expert How-Tos and Guides
Last edit by: philemer
Posts from 1/1/16 onward can be found here: http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/credit-card-programs/1739359-2016-onward-usa-emv-cards-availability-q-chip-pin-signature.html

EMV wikipost volunteers: kebosabi

What is EMV?
EMV is a defacto global standard of technology where there is a visible microchip on the front of the card. It looks like this:

Who issues them?
See Google Docs spreadsheet in Post #1

SFOAMS also has created a list of excellent webpage that shows US EMV cards in a more interactive interface

Another site, which lets you narrow the search for an EMV card by various parameters, is http://www.spotterswiki.com/emv/index.php.

Several credit unions issue some form of Chip-and-PIN credit cards or prepaid cards. Prepaid EMV cards however are not recommended due to junk fees. USAA (currently restricted to members of military) used to offer Chip-and-PIN cards, but as late has backtracked to Chip-and-Signature priority.

Hey that's a cool Google Docs list! I know others that aren't on that list. How can I help by adding them to the list?
My bad for not putting this into the wiki sooner. Right now, the Google Docs is locked out of editing and only in "read-only" view because there were instances in the past where people would just delete the rows not thinking that it affects others viewing the list.

If you promise not to delete any rows and input all the pertinent info (annual fee, rewards, FTF, etc.), I can provide you with edit access. Just shoot me a PM to kebosabi with your gmail address and I'll provide you edit access.

Thanks for helping out!


As of October 2014, no USA-based card issuer offers Chip-and-PIN priority cards except for BMO Harris (Diners Club) and UN Federal Credit Union. Other major USA-based banks such as BofA, Chase, Citi, as well as others issue Chip-and-Signature cards which may work at many automated kiosks. However, bear in mind the word may is used above is a context where there is no absolute certainty of success for certain environments such as automated kiosks due to different natures of offline and online transactions. It is highly recommended to read Post #3 which lists real life FTer examples on how Chip-and-Signature worked and did not work at various transaction environments.

Can I upgrade it right now?
If it's listed on that Google Docs spreadsheet or SFOAMS' Silk page, wouldn't hurt to call/twitter them for a free upgrade. If you get the response you don't like, hang up, try again.

What is the difference between Chip-and-Signature and Chip-and-PIN?
You insert the chipped card into the slot. The physical contact terminal will read the EMV chip and the terminal will automatically read the preferred cardholder verification methods (called CVM) for that card.

Chip-and-Signature means that the terminal will printout a receipt for you to sign. This is the most prevalent authentication for most US issued EMV cards. Chip-and-Signature helps in a way that it will get through to face-to-face merchant transactions where you and the merchant do not speak the same language.

Chip-and-PIN means that the terminal will prompt you to input a PIN for authentication. Some credit union issued credit cards will have this CVM as secondary if Chip-and-Signature cannot be done. Chip-and-PIN is the more prevalent method of authentication used outside the US, especially in transaction environments where no human interaction is needed (i.e. automated gas pumps, toll roads, train kiosks, etc.).

The Google Docs spreadsheet will list which CVM are used in the EMV cards listed. Some cards can only do Chip-and-Signature. Other cards can do both Chip-and-Signature and Chip-and-PIN. And others might have a third option called No CVM (no authentication needed) which is reserved for low value transactions.

One chip can hold a lot more data, therefore it is capable of doing multiple verification methods. That's one of the great things about EMV over the mag-stripe which can hold very little data.

I want to know for sure what my EMV chip does. Is there anyway I can test out my own EMV card to see what the CVM list is?
alexmt has written up a nice step-by-step procedure on Post #3615.

If most of the EMV cards in the US is the Chip-and-Signature type, doesn't that mean it's still useless abroad?
Depends if you see it as glass half empty or glass half full. See Post #3 for further details on how Chip-and-Signature has worked both successfully and unsuccessfully depending on the merchant transaction environment and use your best judgment whether which one is right for you.

Are there any places in the US that are accepting transactions via the EMV chip?
tmiw has created a dedicated Google maps webpage to show where EMV has been proven to work here: http://emvacceptedhere.com/ Per his Post #4240, feel free to add any places with active EMV terminals if you come across one.

As of 2014/05, the EMV terminals in most Walmarts and Sam's Clubs are being turned on. Hence, the best place to try them out would be your local Walmart or Sam's Club. For other merchants, it's slowly being phased in.

I hope people will post them in the Post your receipt of your 1st EMV based transaction in the US thread. cvarming has shown us an EMV transaction receipt from Brooklyn, NY in Post #2380. I myself had my first EMV based (Chip-and-Signature) transaction in two stores in the Los Angeles area, as shown in detail in Post #2705 (courtesy of WhatWhatTech for pointing these two stores out)

I don't want a chip in my card. I heard horror stories all over the media saying hackers can steal my credit card info from a mile away.
There are two types of chips. One is contactless and the other is contact. Cards can be either one or the other, or both.

In the Google Docs spreadsheet, the cards that are capable of contactless payments are listed seperately under the "RFID or NFC contactless chip" column. If it says yes, then that means it has the ability to do contactless payments. If it says no, it doesn't have that feature.

The one that the media has overhyped about hackers "stealing your information wirelessly" was the contactless type like this:

You are worried about this happening, right?

You don't have to worry. EMV is a chip standard that can have both contact and contactless interfaces. With the traditional contact interface, this means you actually have to physically insert the chip into a POS terminal for it to be authorized, like this:

With the contact interface, nothing is wireless. No data is sent out in a stand-alone contact type EMV chip. With the EMV contactless interface, data is sent wirelessly.

Furthermore, contactless chip cards are required to show a symbol (looks like Wi-Fi symbol) somewhere on the card that to denote it's capability as a contactless card. For example, here's an example of a Discover Card with contactless capability (in which Discover calls "Discover ZIP") showing the contactless symbol on the back of the card:

Don't believe everything that the media says. Besides, millions of people all over the world from London to Singapore, uses contactless payments daily in extremely crowded subways and mass transit with nary any problems. There are multiple layers of encrypted securities and keys that are needed to break the code.

Frankly, giving your physical card to a waiter/waitress who takes the card out of your view is much more susceptible to fraud than contactless payments.

Why should I care?
If you are an international traveler, you will want this because majority of the world has or in the process of converting to this payment format.


In fact, in 2012, even North Korea moved to the EMV format, leaving the US as one of the countries in the world that hasn't done so.

In addition, VISA, MC, AMEX, and Discover have all agreed to incentivize the USA shifting to EMV payments by 2015 by shifting liability for fraudulent transactions to merchants if they do not have EMV equipment and the cardholder has an EMV card. So if you travel internationally or would like to get one before the others, you might be interested in getting one.


BS! I had no problems using my card in [insert whereever country], [insert whatever point in time]
If you stick to the tourist path where they have lots of visitors from the US, you should have no problems using your mag-stripe only card in hotels and restaurants, at least for now. But as things can change as things go forward.

However, consider that once you start taking the off-beaten path, go to non-touristy places where they are not familiar with mag-stripes, rent a car and use toll roads, fill up gas, or try to buy train tickets you might end up into a trouble of the machine not recognizing your card because it lacks the chip. Furthermore, a lot of toll roads, gas pumps, and automated ticket machines lack any human assistance to help you when you need it the most.

But [insert credit card company] told me all merchants that display their logo must accept them! All I have to do is report them for violating their agreements, right?
There are several factors against this.

1. You can only speak English. The merchant representative, most likely a part-time clerk earning minimum wage, speaks in a different language, let's say French. If you have no French language skills, how are you going to get your point across? Are you going to whip out your cell phone at exorbitant int'l roaming charges and hope the customer service is going to translate it for you on the spot? Or maybe you might actually know French. But how about Swahili, Farsi, Balinese, or the multiple languages in mainland China?

2. Just like US, the rest of the world's businesses uses part-time minimum wage workers as cashiers to cut down on labor costs. Most of their SOP training manuals are written by MBA types to not to do anything they are not familiar with. Do not expect them to understand the intricate details of credit card mumbo jumbo. You don't expect Taco Bell employees to understand the minute details of Discover-JCB-Union Pay agreements, right? Same thing the other way around: be respectful as a guest in their country, prepare in advance in their ways, avoid being an "ugly American" stereotype.

3. You are a guest in their country. You are a minority. If 99.9% of their country's people and other tourists from around the world uses EMV, do you really think they are going to accomodate the 0.1% of American tourists who only have mag-stripes credit cards?

4. Again, you are a guest in their country. How would you, as an American standing in line, react if a Chinese tourist was clogging up the lines at a local Taco Bell because the clerk doesn't understand the Discover-Union Pay agreement and has trouble communicating between Mandarin spoken by the tourist and English spoken by the Taco Bell clerk? Same way the other way around. You do not want to clog up the lines for everyone. The less hassle, the better.

5. VISA and MC make tons of money from merchants in that country. Say SNCF French Rail. It's a billion dollar company in France. Do you think VISA is going to pull the plug of their relationship with SNCF because SNCF refuses to do mag-stripe processing at their unmanned train station kiosk? Of course not. Be realistic.

6. And lastly, if you're up against an unstaffed toll kiosk, gas pump or train ticket machine, are you going to yell curses at the machine?

But I want my credit card to be able to be used in the US too!
No worries. They have not gotten rid of the mag-stripe on the back of the card for backward compatibility reasons, just like we still have embossed numbers on our cards for backwards compatibility to using those old carbon copy imprinters.

[insert own Hyatt card image front and back together with red arrows pointing to all the backward compatibility features]

You use the chip on the front of the card abroad (for now), and the mag-stripe just like any other card for the US. Basically, you're increasing your credit card's acceptance rate by getting a card that both via the chip and the mag-stripe. You're getting a better deal for free.

And when 2015 comes along and US switches to EMV, you'll be way ahead of everyone else too!


So why did the rest of the world and the US moved/moving toward EMV?
Primarily, due to fraud concerns. You see, the mag-stripe has been with us since the 1950s. It may have been the most high tech thing back in the day, but with the technology that is available today, any shmo can pick up a $100 USB magnetic card skimming device off of eBay and get your credit card info.

And unlike skimming off contactless cards which actually need the person to have l33t programming skills, skimming off a magnetic stripe has become so ubiquitous that nary a day goes about skimming fraud going on somewhere in America, from gas pumps, Michael's stores (2011), Target breaches (2013), restaurant waiters/waitresses, to even McDonald's drive thrus.

https://www.google.com/search?q=skimming+fraud

These type of fraud used to be prevalent in Europe. But once they started switching over to EMV starting over 2 decades ago, this type of fraud went elsewhere. It went over to Asia, Canada and Mexico, Latin America, etc. etc. until they too began implementing EMV to combat skimming fraud. The US is practically the only country left that hasn't done so, therefore all the fraud that used to take place elsewhere is now happening here.


But EMV is old and it's not fool proof. Shouldn't we just skip over it and do something new instead?
Yes, EMV is old. It was developed in the 1990s and its smart card payment predecessor was first introduced in France. But as of today, it has become the defacto global standard of payments.

But then, what else is there? There is no other de facto global standard of payments alternative. For example, if we decide to skip over it and do something new, hypothetically like DNA matching technology, it still means US int'l travelers will continue to have problems abroad with useless plastic acceptance because no other country is using this DNA matching technology except the US.

Besides, nothing is fool proof. You can say that the bank vault isn't fool proof because you can crack it open if enough C4 is used. But your average low-life scumbag isn't likely to get military grade C4 easily either. But the bank vault does make it harder to get the bank's money over say a petty cash box. That's the point here. EMV is akin to a security tight bank vault, the old mag-stripe is akin to a petty cash box lying around inside the drawer.


I'm a business owner and I don't think EMV is going to take off. I'm not going to spend extra hundreds of dollars to upgrade my credit card machine. Convince me other wise why I should.
I can understand the added extra cost to your business once this switchover takes place. But before even saying that, look at your existing POS terminal. Does it have a slot somewhere to insert a card?

Most likely, if you had replaced your POS terminal within the past five years, you already have an EMV capable terminal. EMV is basically just not turned on yet from the processor and acquirer side.

If you have an EMV capable terminal, then a best bet would be to contact your acquirer to have the EMV feature turned on. You did your end of the deal already by having an EMV capable terminal, it is now the acquirers' responsibility to turn it on in accordance to the EMV switchover mandate.

And if you don't, you are going to replace your POS terminal anyway from common wear and tear. It isn't a hard switch-over. You can continue to use your POS terminal until it dies out because EMV cardholders will still have the mag-stripe on the back. And by the time your non-EMV capable POS terminal is up for replacement the market will be full with these newer POS terminals that can accept the mag-stripe, EMV, as well as contactless payments.

In addition, you may also want to check with your acquirer or processor about EMV capable terminals. Some of them are willing to replace your terminal for free in preparation for the US EMV switchover. Call and ask for details.


But what's in it for me? I'm the one that has to pay for the upgrade.
All the major card networks have given incentives for merchants for the upcoming EMV switchover.

If 75% or more of your credit card transactions are done on an EMV contact and contactless terminal, they are going to waive your annual PCI-DSS fees, which usually costs you around $5.00-$19.95/month per terminal. The overall long term cost savings of those compliance fees will be larger than the cost of an one time upgrade for the terminal.

The downside is that once EMV switchover happens and if you do not have a POS terminal that is able to accept EMV, the fraud liability shifts over to the merchant.

I own several fast food franchises. If I upgrade my POS terminals at all of my restaurants, it's going to cost me thousands, if not millions. I don't think anyone is going to use a fake credit card to buy $5 burgers. And if they do, wouldn't it be cheaper for me to eat the fraud cost?
Remember also that fraud isn't just committed by dishonest customers using fraudulent cards. Fraud can also happen with dishonest employees skimming off credit card data from the mag-stripe as in the case of a teenage McDonald's drive thru employee skimming off $13,000 of customers' credit cards in Olympia, WA. Consider the public relations fall out that your business may have if this happens (i.e. the big Target breach of 2013, where someone used a mag stripe card to load malware INTO Target's system). Is it worth risking to take such a huge PR disaster?
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USA EMV cards: Availability, Q&A (Chip & PIN -or- Chip & Signature) [2012-2015]

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Old Mar 24, 2014, 6:57 am
  #3676  
 
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Originally Posted by alexmt
Originally Posted by joshwex90
You do have a lot of employees in financial or high-tech companies who have smart chip ID cards, and are required to insert the card and keep it inserted for the duration they're working.
This is the main use I was referring to. However, laundromat load cards, hotel room keys (I've seen contact smart cards a couple times), office door keys, etc are all the same - insert card and WAIT for the green light or whatever... wait for the action to complete before you remove the card.

I know for me, my first EMV transaction was completely intuitive. I don't know why I'd have removed a smart card before whatever I was doing was done, because that's not how smart cards work - in any application.

Originally Posted by nall
I was surprised that in South Korea, everywhere I went people swiped my card (which was, I might add, chip enabled).
That's because, as far as I know, most transactions in South Korea are not EMV. I think they're right up there with the US in terms of percent magnetic stripe.

Originally Posted by WhatWhatTech
That can't be true everywhere. I used my C&S Citi Premier last October in Germany and the machine would always switch to English.
You're in the European Union with a card that is issued in one of the official languages of the Union, I imagine there may be some requirements there.
I've had both in the EU. Some that switch to English, some that don't. It's fun guessing when to remove the card! Fortunately there's usually beeping involved.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 9:13 am
  #3677  
 
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Originally Posted by sdsearch
Ah, the benefits of churning cards with spending thresholds. I just looked it up, and found that I did my DMV annual registration in Dec 2013 with a card that I've already but into a drawer. (I've since switched primary spending cards three times.)

But anyway, if you really mean a few weeks ago, that may be after it ended. The reports so far only say it went through end of January (which would be over 6 weeks ago by now).
Actually it was the end of January. ><

And I actually ended up getting an email yesterday night that my card was fraudulently used at a gas station not anywhere near from CA yesterday night. (bangs head on wall)

Oh well, I guess breaches like these will be a fact of life so long as we continue to use MS and customers' credit card data are kept on computer servers. At least I don't have to pay for it and it wasn't a card I normally use so it's only a minor inconvenience, but still a waste of time is still a waste of time.

So we now have Target, Neiman Marcus, and now the CA DMV all within a few months. Anyone wager who the next credit card breach is going to be?

Originally Posted by LoneTree
I've had both in the EU. Some that switch to English, some that don't. It's fun guessing when to remove the card! Fortunately there's usually beeping involved.
It wouldn't be that hard for manufacturers to put in a small speaker and dedicate a flash ROM with an audio file so it actually speaks to "please remove the card/por favor, retire la tarjeta" in conjunction with display letters. Japanese POS terminals actually say that in Japanese.

Last edited by kebosabi; Mar 24, 2014 at 9:21 am
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 9:56 am
  #3678  
 
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Interesting read on the article and the comments section on PYMNTS.com 6 Reasons to Call an EMV ‘Time Out’

Basically the same old "boo-hoo it's gonna cost us money" and "EMV isn't perfect because it doesn't solve online fraud."
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 10:19 am
  #3679  
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Originally Posted by kebosabi
Interesting read on the article and the comments section on PYMNTS.com 6 Reasons to Call an EMV ‘Time Out’

Basically the same old "boo-hoo it's gonna cost us money" and "EMV isn't perfect because it doesn't solve online fraud."
And how we should be focusing on mobile payments instead since everyone's going to be using that. BTW, Google Wallet isn't faster than swiping and might actually be slower.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 10:35 am
  #3680  
 
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Originally Posted by kebosabi
It wouldn't be that hard for manufacturers to put in a small speaker and dedicate a flash ROM with an audio file so it actually speaks to "please remove the card/por favor, retire la tarjeta" in conjunction with display letters. Japanese POS terminals actually say that in Japanese.
Speaking of which, the average Japanese chip terminal, which locks the card in place until the end of the transaction (and then pops it out), suddenly seems like a smarter idea.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 12:23 pm
  #3681  
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Originally Posted by alexmt
This is the main use I was referring to. However, laundromat load cards, hotel room keys (I've seen contact smart cards a couple times), office door keys, etc are all the same - insert card and WAIT for the green light or whatever... wait for the action to complete before you remove the card.
The vast majority of hotel door keys I see today are still swipe. So those you insert and remove and then wait for the right light.

I've had smart card keys in hotels before, but I can't remember whether any of those were in the US. (And if they were outside the US, they were in a country where EMV is already widely adopted.)

And as I said before, I rarely use laundromats (and even then they've all been either cash or metal token the last time I used them), and I don't run into office door keys because my company doesn't use those. So excluding travel to EMV-adopted countries, none of the examples are ones I run into in my everyday life, and I bet most other people (at least outside certain industries/certain cities) don't either.

Originally Posted by alexmt
I know for me, my first EMV transaction was completely intuitive. I don't know why I'd have removed a smart card before whatever I was doing was done, because that's not how smart cards work - in any application.
My first EMV transcation was completely routine, but that's simply because I'm a routine-enough international traveler that I had observed those table-top restaurant transcations in Europe a lot (and in fact had experienced them in swipe mode myself many times already). So I knew that I had to wait for something, and it knew from watching others at tables near me that they left the card inserted. (And it wasn't just at restaurants; I'd been in lines in various retail places in Europe and seen the people in front me using their EMV cards long before I got my first one. So by the time I got my first one, I knew what to do just from observing others on previous travels.)

The thing is, internationally-traveling FTers are not typical people (though they may typical of many people in this particular thread!). The average person outside of "skyscraper" cities who does't use laundromats (or only the cash ones), doesn't travel much (or only to hotel that use swipe door cards), and doesn't work at a company that uses office door keys, they may never have seen a smart card in action (let alone used one themselves).
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 12:34 pm
  #3682  
 
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Originally Posted by lordsutch
I mentioned SIMs in my original post, so I'm not sure how my statement is "not true."
You stated that DoD is the "only major application" of smart cards. This is not true. To clarify, even within the federal government, there are plenty of "major applications" of smart cards, and that is just one organization.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 12:39 pm
  #3683  
 
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Originally Posted by alexmt
Are you willing to divulge the nature of your business? I'm curious where you find so many 1 - Americans and 2 - dumb 'Muricans. I mean, while for payment it's new it's not like smart cards aren't used in other aspects of American life... Americans should understand the basic concept of insert the card and wait for more directions from their other uses of smart cards.
Newer realtor association key lockboxes use ISO 7816 smart cards, and even realtors have figured out how to use them.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 12:41 pm
  #3684  
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Originally Posted by sdsearch
The vast majority of hotel door keys I see today are still swipe. So those you insert and remove and then wait for the right light.
I have yet to see a hotel use smart chip cards (maybe once), but I do see them use magnetic stripe cards where you insert and wait for the green light before removing. You can't remove before the green light, at least IME
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 12:55 pm
  #3685  
 
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Originally Posted by sdsearch
Originally Posted by alexmt
This is the main use I was referring to. However, laundromat load cards, hotel room keys (I've seen contact smart cards a couple times), office door keys, etc are all the same - insert card and WAIT for the green light or whatever... wait for the action to complete before you remove the card.
The vast majority of hotel door keys I see today are still swipe. So those you insert and remove and then wait for the right light.

I've had smart card keys in hotels before, but I can't remember whether any of those were in the US. (And if they were outside the US, they were in a country where EMV is already widely adopted.)

And as I said before, I rarely use laundromats (and even then they've all been either cash or metal token the last time I used them), and I don't run into office door keys because my company doesn't use those. So excluding travel to EMV-adopted countries, none of the examples are ones I run into in my everyday life, and I bet most other people (at least outside certain industries/certain cities) don't either.

Originally Posted by alexmt
I know for me, my first EMV transaction was completely intuitive. I don't know why I'd have removed a smart card before whatever I was doing was done, because that's not how smart cards work - in any application.
My first EMV transcation was completely routine, but that's simply because I'm a routine-enough international traveler that I had observed those table-top restaurant transcations in Europe a lot (and in fact had experienced them in swipe mode myself many times already). So I knew that I had to wait for something, and it knew from watching others at tables near me that they left the card inserted. (And it wasn't just at restaurants; I'd been in lines in various retail places in Europe and seen the people in front me using their EMV cards long before I got my first one. So by the time I got my first one, I knew what to do just from observing others on previous travels.)

The thing is, internationally-traveling FTers are not typical people (though they may typical of many people in this particular thread!). The average person outside of "skyscraper" cities who does't use laundromats (or only the cash ones), doesn't travel much (or only to hotel that use swipe door cards), and doesn't work at a company that uses office door keys, they may never have seen a smart card in action (let alone used one themselves).
Keep in mind, some of us use more "advanced" office and hotel keys that are contactless.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 1:02 pm
  #3686  
 
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Originally Posted by LoneTree
Keep in mind, some of us use more "advanced" office and hotel keys that are contactless.
And some of these are "smart" (using an ISO 14443 or similar interface) and others are simple RFID tags, typically on 125 kHz. The latter is subject to duplication and replay attacks. Gyms and apartment buildings tend to use the latter.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 2:07 pm
  #3687  
 
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Originally Posted by tmiw
And how we should be focusing on mobile payments instead since everyone's going to be using that. BTW, Google Wallet isn't faster than swiping and might actually be slower.
I just bought a Quarter Pounder with Cheese at a McDonalds for lunch today and I used the Citi MC Paypass contactless sticker to pay for it, similar to the contactless photo above on the wiki.

It was running very slooooow for the transaction to go through while the person before and after me who swiped got their receipts almost instantaneously.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 2:15 pm
  #3688  
 
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Originally Posted by sdsearch
The thing is, internationally-traveling FTers are not typical people (though they may typical of many people in this particular thread!). The average person outside of "skyscraper" cities who does't use laundromats (or only the cash ones), doesn't travel much (or only to hotel that use swipe door cards), and doesn't work at a company that uses office door keys, they may never have seen a smart card in action (let alone used one themselves).
In the context of LA not being a skyscraper city (we can discuss whether LA is a skyscraper city or an ugly mess of suburban sprawl that's only going to get worse in another thread), but I think many here in LA, especially those who use public transit, are accustomed to using smart cards. I don't know if you take Metro or not, but when riding the bus or light rail system here in LA, we now need a contactless card called TAP to ride them (nevermind how crappy the TAP system is though).

And Chase banks are popping up everywhere, especially in generally Hispanic neighborhoods so the idea of using Chase's "Blink" ATM debit cards are also quite prevalent here in LA.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 2:53 pm
  #3689  
 
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Originally Posted by kebosabi
Originally Posted by sdsearch
The thing is, internationally-traveling FTers are not typical people (though they may typical of many people in this particular thread!). The average person outside of "skyscraper" cities who does't use laundromats (or only the cash ones), doesn't travel much (or only to hotel that use swipe door cards), and doesn't work at a company that uses office door keys, they may never have seen a smart card in action (let alone used one themselves).
In the context of LA not being a skyscraper city (we can discuss whether LA is a skyscraper city or an ugly mess of suburban sprawl that's only going to get worse in another thread), but I think many here in LA, especially those who use public transit, are accustomed to using smart cards. I don't know if you take Metro or not, but when riding the bus or light rail system here in LA, we now need a contactless card called TAP to ride them (nevermind how crappy the TAP system is though).

And Chase banks are popping up everywhere, especially in generally Hispanic neighborhoods so the idea of using Chase's "Blink" ATM debit cards are also quite prevalent here in LA.
I don't think those count as smart cards in this context. i.e. insert EMV card and wait for prompts before removing.

My point with the contactless was that I've been to plenty of places described by the others as big city tech (office, hotel), but they used contactless instead. I've only ever been to cash laundries though. My one in college was a swiped based system linked to our accounts however.
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Old Mar 24, 2014, 5:58 pm
  #3690  
 
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Originally Posted by LoneTree
I don't think those count as smart cards in this context. i.e. insert EMV card and wait for prompts before removing.
Oh okay. But then, would that be an "action" instead of form of technology? If it the "action" of (1) dipping a card, (2) wait for a prompt, (3) remove, then I assume everyone who has a bank account does these actions at the ATM machine.

Granted, the ATM actually "spits out" the card as an additional reminder to remove the card, which then goes back to the good idea of how Japanese POS EMV terminals does exactly that (latches onto the card, does its thing, then releases the card like an ATM machine when over).
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