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WAVE AND PAY CARDS
A new scheme will allow Britons to make
payments of less than £10 with the swipe of a card. The
wave and pay cards which are being led by
Visa and Mastercard will be launched in seven London
areas in September, before being rolled out to the rest
of the UK. They will allow people to pay for items by
passing a special chip card in front of an electronic
reader installed in a range of retail shops, restaurants
and vending machines in a safe and secure
way.
Oliver Steeley, head of strategy at Mastercard, said,
We need to get the balance of speed and security
just right, but the wave-and-pay cards are safe.
This, he said, was because the technology would be
integrated into customers' existing Chip and PIN credit
or debit card meaning the PIN facility would still be
available.
He said, This gives the issuing bank the
opportunity to prompt for a PIN if they feel it is
necessary. For example a PIN will probably not be
requested if a customer bought a travel card in the
morning with Chip and PIN and then used the contactless
method to buy a sandwich as it would be pretty safe to
assume the card was still with its rightful owner.
However, if the card has not been used for a few days
then a PIN would be requested to verify the user.
Sandra Quinn spokeswoman for UK payments agency
APACs also agreed that the security risks would be
minimal. She said, The technology in
these cards is extremely sophisticated so as well as
having a limit of £10 a transaction, the cards will also
prompt people for a PIN after a certain amount of
spending times." She added that the number of times,
was yet to be confirmed, but would be around the
six or seven".
The wave-and-pay scheme, which will initially be
available to those living in EC2, EC3, EC4, E1, E14, SE1,
SE16, follows plans last month by Barclays who teamed up
with taxi firm Cabcom to give travellers a cashless way
to pay for fares up to £10. Bank of Scotland, Citi,
Halifax, HSBC, Lloyds TSB and The Royal Bank of Scotland
Group have also announced plans to provide up to five
million people nationwide with the cards the by the end
of 2008. (Source: Computeractive, May/07)
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