Getting Swiped with a No-Swipe Credit Card

Tue Oct 24, 2006 12:19AM EDT

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The latest tech scare, real or imagined, is hitting RFID (radio frequency identification) technology, specifically the type used in new credit cards and keychains from MasterCard, Exxon, Visa, and your local bank.

It seems these cards, which let you buy everything from gas and sandwiches to subway tokens with a simple wave over a sensor, are vulnerable to hostile scans by evil-doing passers-by, according to recent findings by University of Massachusetts researchers. The cards can be scanned up to several feet away and through wallets, so presumably someone could extract your credit card information by just standing next to or near you. Or could they? According to some of the companies that distribute these cards, it's a lot harder to pull off these types of invasions in public than in a lab.

My own experience with RFID is that it doesn't make for a very seamless scan process. When I attended the 3GSM conference in Barcelona earlier this year, I had to wait in line along with dozens of other disgruntled trade show attendees as show workers scanned each of our badges as we entered a new hall. (They were trying to keep track of where everyone went). But the scan process was slow and required obvious, hands-on movements, so I wonder how an actual thief would get away with trying to scan you in public without getting caught. Again, we're talking real-word situations, not labs.

I've been obsessed with cashless transactions conducted by RFID wireless technology in Japan for a few years now, so I got excited when my PayPass keychain arrived from my bank, promising me easy payment at drugstores, gas stations, sub shops, and the New York City subway. I quickly attached my keys to it and proceeded to tap it against readers at the few-and-far-between checkout counters I could find.

It worked pretty well, but security or no security, I couldn't use it at many places besides Burritoville, McDonald's, and my local drugstore. And all transactions over $25 required a signature, anyway, so where's the convenience in that?

I'm still wondering whether the time saved is really worth carrying around a cumbersome keychain when I can just use my non-RFID credit card. Sure, it requires a swipe and a signature, but it pretty much works everywhere.

Last week I lost my keys, and with it, the PayPass. To get a new one, I'd have to cancel my whole credit card—my bank couldn't just replace the keychain. All in all, a mysterious non-time-saving technology that's more of a hassle than it's worth. Put RFID technology in my cell phone or implant it in my hand or whereverthen it might actually make a difference, for better or worse.

Does anyone have any positive or negative experiences with these sorts of RFID credit cards or keychains?

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  • 1 Posted by porrmelody on Tue Oct 24, 2006 9:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    NO NO! the key chain card is terrible as mine broke off and I lost it, no matter how much the bank will cover you there is the anxiety of you knowing someone will find it and try to use or be successful and all you have to be is flashed at a distent this is just not fair to the human emotion knowing your card is floating around. I believe a real secure way of carring your cards is not here yet. To many theifs today and they have it figured before the card hits the market. I have spent three months runing down business that have my card no. and now I am filing faud charges on this and I have over 500.00 gone from the new card.

  • 2 Posted by josicb1 on Wed Oct 25, 2006 12:08AM EDT Report Abuse

    I think most of us are aware that we are heading towards becoming a cash-less society. I'm still unsure of how RFID will play into this process, but I think that as technology is evolving, the options get scarier and more extreme in my opinion. What's next after the keychain? RFID in the forearm, or hand of course! What's next after that? For those of us that understand that this ultimately leads to a "mark on the hand or forehead" this is a scary and unpleasant thought. I embrace technology in business and in life, but as I follow along with technology in the banking arena, I see the government using fear to introduce options that may take away our rights, and that we will live to regret down the road. Boyan Josic http://www.boyanjosic.com

  • 3 Posted by platapapin on Wed Oct 25, 2006 2:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    Maybe I'm a dinosaur, but who really needs RFID payment? Debit card/PIN technology is extremely convenient, works almost everywhere, and is more secure than a credit card. I can understand using RFID based payment technology for certain special applications (gas pumps maybe?) but for the vast majority of payment applications the debit card is perfect. I almost never, ever carry cash any more, and the only reason I do is for cash only merchants, which BTW are very few and far between.

  • 4 Posted by bkhuey on Wed Oct 25, 2006 2:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    I've worked in the financial industry for nearly 15 years now, and in general, love technology. (I have a Bachelor of Science in Information Technology.) The RFID credit or debit card concerns me. As we've read, the technology to read the RFID tags is not perfect, but in time, it will improve. With that improvement will come the increased ability to pull the data from the tags, either as the card holder intended, or not. Sure, the bank will refund the card holder for charges that were not legitimate, but that money has to come from somewhere, and that somewhere (just as in the case of other types of theft) comes down to the price we pay for products and services. Bottom line, I do like RFID when it lets me get through the toll-booth at 60 miles per hour, but I'm not a fan of having RFID attached to my accounts.

  • 5 Posted by army_leads_the_way on Wed Oct 25, 2006 2:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    Look at cub foods. They have a system now that allows you to pay using your thumb print, crazy....

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