£1.1bn anti-fraud card scheme still on track

But delivery of new 'Chip and PIN' cards is behind schedule...

NEWS The delivery of new anti-fraud 'Chip and PIN' credit and debit cards to bank customers in the UK is lagging behind schedule, but the organisation behind the £1.1bn scheme claims the rollout is still on track.

The Chip and PIN project, which is backed by payment clearing body APACS, banks, card issuers and the British Retail Consortium, aims to issue 42 million people with 120 million of the new cards by 2005 as part of plans to cut the UK's £424m annual card fraud bill by half.

The first Chip and PIN 'barometer' reveals that eight million of the new cards have been issued to one in six cardholders – although the original target at the launch in October was that one in five cardholders would have the cards by Christmas.

A spokeswoman for the Chip and PIN programme told silicon.com this is not a problem and that the scheme is on track.

"The rollout is broadly on target and we are very pleased with the progress," she said.

Over 100,000 businesses have switched to accepting payment by the new card, which involves entering a PIN number at the checkout instead of signing a paper receipt. Safeway has completed its rollout and is accepting an average of 100,000 transactions per week across its 480 stores.

Sandra Quinn, Chip and PIN spokesperson from APACS, said in a statement: "Cardholders and retailers across the UK are starting to benefit from this new fraud-busting technology."

The UK is the first country in the world to adopt the EuroPay Mastercard Visa (EMV) card standard, and one in five cardholders are expected to have the new cards by Christmas this year. A target of 90 per cent rollout has been set for the end of 2004.

In a separate announcement today, SchlumbergerSema said it has won a contract to equip the UK rail network's handheld and cashier ticketing terminals with the Chip and PIN technology. The project is expected to be complete by autumn 2004.

Comments

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  1. 1. anonymous

    Criminals will always be only one step behind. With a signature you can ALWAYS prove you're innocent and get your money back. The PIN system will switch the burden of proof to the customer. Remember the shabby treatment of customers by the banks when they were victims of 'phantom' withdrawls from cash machines?

    • 27 January 2004 16:22
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  2. 2. anonymous

    It occurs to me to wonder just how hard it is, for instance, to steal someone's card, stick it in the appropriate card reader and re-program the PIN number on the chip. I recall something similar being done to magnetic strips on cards to put effectivly the card of your choice on anything (even as I recall a store reward card)

    I've no idea how they work or how encrypted the info might be, but a cash machine can do it, so presumably it can't be *that* difficult!

    I suppose what it might do is stop fraud of the type where a 6-foot unshaven body builder hands over a stolen card in the name of "Mrs Elsie Zzzzt", scrawls any old rubbish on the receipt and gets away with it because the shop assistent doesn't bother to check....

    • 29 January 2004 09:16
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