Agreed, BTW both charges were declined due to non matching expiration date. So they somehow had the card number but not the expiration and they tried to guess.
They have become insanely efficient at detecting and processing fraud. Now if they could expend some of that energy to making the cards more secure...
A friend of mine, who till recently was running the credit card fraud division at a major Canadian Bank, explained how the chip cards work. When you put you card into the machine to make a purchase, the card connects with your bank and asks for your pin. If that is right the bank then asks for a unique code contained in the chip. If that is correct, the transaction goes through. The last thing the bank does is send your card another different code for the next time you use your card. It is a two way process with the code always changing. Better system but not perfect especially when I can make purchases with the tap and go feature that requires no pin to be entered (for low dollar amounts).
Makes you want to drink. Cheers
How does this work for online purchases?
Here is a thought about online credit card use. Why dont websites ask for you pin. They want your number and the 3 digits on the back but thats it. How about verifying with a pin that is not written down on the card?
cheers
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