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Why Do Credit Cards Now Have Chips?

If you or your friends and family members use a debit or credit card,
You may have noticed that they no longer swipe their card through the machine. Instead, they insert it into a different slot on the front of the machine and wait.

What’s going on here? It’s new technology at work! Over the past several years, credit card companies have slowly been introducing a new type of card: the “chip” card or
EMV card. EMV stands for “Europay, Mastercard, and Visa,”
Which are the companies that developed the standards for these new cards
That contain computer chips.

Although EMV cards are a relatively new phenomenon in the United States,
They’ve been in use in other areas of the world, especially Europe,
Since the early 2000s. EMV cards are quickly replacing magnetic stripe cards,
Which have been the standard since they were introduced in 1970.

Why add computer chips to debit and credit cards?
EMV cards are designed to increase the security of transactions
And reduce credit card fraud.

While magnetic stripe cards were cutting-edge technology for many years,
Criminals learned how to steal the information stored on the magnetic stripe and use it to create counterfeit cards. The resulting fraud cost banks and merchants over $5 billion every year.

EMV cards are more secure because of the inclusion of a computer chip.
On a magnetic stripe card,
All the data about the cardholder’s account is contained in an unchanging format
On that magnetic stripe and can be easily copied.

When an EMV card is used,
However, the computer chip creates a unique transaction code that can never be used again. Chip cards are also hard to clone. If a thief steals data from a single transaction,
It’s useless because the transaction code can never be used again and
Attempted fraudulent transactions would simply be denied.

To date, statistics show that EMV cards are indeed working to reduce the amount of credit card fraud. Since 2015, credit card companies have seen 54-58% decreases in the amount of counterfeit fraud.

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Ekster EU

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