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Enthusiast
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2006
- Posts
- 13,225
Why?
I hope we have a choice to continue to sign for transactions.
Do you use the same pin for all your accounts?As a merchant, I prefer PIN customers.... cos no risk to me.
Do you use the same pin for all your accounts?
Well let me tell I have heaps of accounts (not just credit cards) and I have about 3 different type of pins (in slight variation) that I can remember based on the importance of the account. How would I remember every single pin if all were different?
My theory is keep things simple and signatures are about as simple as they get. And to be honest I do not care too much what the merchant prefers.
Don't you still have the option to sign even if you have a PIN on your card? That way those who want to continue signing (or whatever reason) can do so, while those who want to use a PIN can as well. Everybody's happy!
<snip>Moving to 100 percent chip card issuance. By 1 January 2010, banks and other financial institutions must issue all new Visa credit cards on chip; by 1 January 2011 all new Visa debit and reloadable prepaid cards must be on chip; and by 1 April 2013, 100 percent of all Visa cards must be on chip.
Introducing a broad rollout of PIN (Personal Identification Number) verification for all domestic transactions, with signatures no longer accepted from 1 April 2013
Interestingly, when overseas my CBA card is "signature mandated" in certain Eftpos machines. I don't even get the option to use my pin.
+1 for PIN.
Don't you still have the option to sign even if you have a PIN on your card? That way those who want to continue signing (or whatever reason) can do so, while those who want to use a PIN can as well. Everybody's happy!
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Both Visa and Mastercard are frantically working towards chip issuance, and there aren't many Visa or MC cards currently without chips.
While in Australia, yes it does have the option. But you may find many of other countries prevent you to choose between sign & pin. So long you have the chip on the card, they "expect" you to pin.
Mal, hard to believe, but the USA is yet to introduce chip technology.