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The Long, Slow Demise of Credit Card Signatures Starts Today (cnet.com)

Last year, all four major U.S. payment providers -- Mastercard, Visa, American Express and Discover -- announced plans to remove the requirement that merchants collect signatures for card transactions. Those plans officially go into effect today, or Saturday in the case of Visa. CNET reports: [D]on't despair if you actually like writing your signature at retail stores, because their ultimate demise will likely take a while. The change is only optional, with merchants, not customers, given the new power to decide whether to get rid of signatures. So, if asked to sign, please don't insist to your next cashier that you no longer need to -- it won't work. Also, plenty of retailers will likely want to keep signatures, particularly if their workers are paid based on a lot of tips, or they sell pricey items. Still, the change marks a clear awareness from payment providers that the signature doesn't really work as a strong protector against fraud.

The change is being handled a little differently by each payment provider. For instance, Mastercard, Discover and American Express said they'll let retailers make every kind of card payment optional for a signature, regardless of whether you've got a new chip card or you still swipe. Visa, meanwhile, isn't changing its requirements for payments using a swipe card, but it did relax its policy for chip card and contactless payments like Apple Pay. Visa noted that over 75 percent of face-to-face transactions using its cards in North America already don't require a signature, thanks to lower-value transactions.

6 of 114 comments (clear)

  1. Hey USians! by JoeDuncan · · Score: 3, Informative

    ... welcome to the year 2000!

    By the time the rest of us are authorizing credit purchases with telepathy, you'll probably *JUST* be introducing the "tap & go" LOL what a fucking backwater...

  2. Who signs their real name? by Snotnose · · Score: 3, Interesting

    These signing terminals have been a thing for a good 15-20 years now, yet I've never signed one. I sign either Foo Bar or Mickey Mouse, depending on my mood. All have gone through with 0 hassle.

    In fact, I bought groceries from Von's today, signed Foo Bar with no issues

    Then again, their Just 4 U program ties my phone # to my credit card so there's that.

  3. partial security / insecurity -- what's the point by supernova87a · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It was silly for the card networks and banks to chicken out on implementing Chip + PIN. People will have to face the (relatively small) pain of learning how to use it at some time, and better to just rip the bandaid off all at once.

    All of Europe, rest of world can deal with using a PIN. What's so special about the US? Just do it, save us all from having to subsidize fraud.

  4. Why not chip-and-pin? by jonwil · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Australia has been using chip-and-pin credit cards for years now, as has Europe and many other places. What is it about the US that makes card companies (Visa, MasterCard etc), banks and merchants so reluctant to introduce chip-and-pin in the US?

  5. Re:partial security / insecurity -- what's the poi by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The truly obnoxious thing is that without the PIN, the chip itself is worthless, but was forced on us anyway. So we got the slowdown at the registers for no reason. With a PIN, at least if I lose my card or my wallet is stolen, the card would be useless to the thief barring unbelievable luck in guessing. But with only the chip in play, the only place a thief couldn't use my card is the gas station, which was already the case with the stripe.

    Pointless. Security. Theater.

    --
    Imagine all the people...
  6. Re:partial security / insecurity -- what's the poi by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Informative

    Most credit card fraud is based upon writing bogus data (data for the victim's card) to the magnetic strip, so the chip does at least provide security against someone getting hold of your number and creating a fake credit card using it.

    But yes, it does nothing for you without a PIN if the card leaves your possession.

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    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.