Discover announced it will no longer require signatures at the point of sale for credit/debit card transactions beginning in April 2018. Mastercard made a similar announcement in October with the same April 2018 timeframe for implementation.
The card networks are quick to point out that they have the security framework in place to ensure all transactions are valid without the signature requirement.
“With the rise in new payment security capabilities, like chip technology and tokenization, the time is right to remove this step from the checkout experience,” said Jasma Ghai, vice president of Global Products Innovation at Discover.
Anything that makes checkout take less time sounds good to me, experts have said the signature doesn’t do anything to enhance the security, regardless.
With Mastercard and Discover going this route, we can only guess the pressure is on Visa and Amex to do the same. A larger question is whether individual retailers will take steps to eliminate the signature requirement from the checkout process. Once all networks don’t require it, they’ll be quicker to do so, but so long as it’s only Mastercard and Discover, I can see that being an issue.
The signature requirement is so pointless. I just draw a wavy line and cashiers have never cared. I wish we would use a PIN for all credit cards. The Target Red Card credit card uses chip and PIN. The Target credit card is one of the credit cards I bring with me for international travel because of the PIN. I can buy metro tickets with it at a kiosk.
Could this be the end of tipping in restaurants?
The receipt will probably still contain a signature line, but only to authorize the tip (but I doubt they’ll tell you that).
Doubt it, even in countries with PIN + chip tipping is still possible
“Anything that makes checkout take less time sounds good to me, experts have said the signature doesn’t do anything to enhance the security, regardless.”
Please proofread.
I agree that a signature is very ineffective at stopping card fraud. However,there is a difference between MasterCard/VISA eliminating the requirement for a signature and Discover/AMEX. The former merely run networks that payments travel on while the latter also issue the cards and are, therefore, bearing the fraud losses. MasterCard and VISA bear NO fraud losses. In fact, they are still paid their transaction fees on the fraudulent transactions It is the banks and credit unions that issue the cards that take all the losses, yet the networks can make decisions like this about whether a signature is required. It was VISA and MasterCard that decided the US would operate under chip & signature instead of chip & PIN like most of Europe. The networks feared that many consumers in the US were too dumb to remember a PIN and that would cut into their revenue from completed transactions. Smart move on their part since they don’t get hit with fraud losses.
In other news…Visa spent a year developing a signature sound
https://www.cnbc.com/video/2017/12/07/visa-spent-a-year-developing-a-signature-sound-report.html
The “Closing Bell” crew discusses Visa’s signature sound, which the company spent a year developing, that will be used on their payment app.
10 years from now the industry will do away with physical cards and send the new account directly to Apple Pay after verifying your smart phone upon approval.
You have to have a populace that has almost completely adopted digital wallets to eliminate physical cards, I don’t think that will happen within 10 years. The adoption rate is increasing, but you have to reach critical mass to do away with that and I don’t see that happening until the boomer generation is much smaller as they are laggards in terms of technology adoption.
Signatures are complete and utter waste of time. I can count on one finger in the last decade anyone as ever checked my signature. I haven’t used my signature once – it’s just a line and a quick tap of the accept button. When I see people laboriously signing their full name, it’s like being stuck behind assholes who still write checks.
Get with the program Visa and Amex!
+1.
+2 for check writing. Don’t these people have debit cards? What’s the deal?
Those people are just really, really old-timey old.
Let’s be respectful. They won’t be around forever..
Yes, signatures really do nothing for security. Nowadays I usually just draw a squiggly line, or a smiley face as my signature or something like that.
Same. I’ve signed my purchases before as Steve Jobs, the band Creed, and a handful of other things. I believe I also read an article once about a guy that drew a picture of a whale for his signature and even tried signing his name with the word “Unauthorized” and all transactions were charged as normal.
Yes, a reporter from the New York Observer/Village Voice or something like, did something similar a few years ago, and it made a great impression on me. He went all over the city, even to Walgreens-level national chains, and signed anything and everything with the e-pen at the POS. He signed his own name to his partner’s/coworker’s card (willingly offered for the experiment) on which he wasn’t a signatory; he signed “Mickey Mouse”; he drew a straight line for his signature; etc.
Only time a merchant will require ID is if they have reason to believe there may be fraud or a chance of a fraudulent transaction. They do have the right to prevent fraud, as fraud impacts the merchant the most. However, to ask for ID for every single transaction they process is counterproductive.
Eliminating the signature requirement does nothing for cardholder security. It doesn’t even shift liability between issuer and merchant.
I’m willing to wager it’ll be at least another decade before the US adopts chip-and-PIN, and by then it’ll already be obsolete.