If I lost or had my DC stolen, can it be used to order goods.? would they have to have my PIN; NO: to be able to use it? i only use it to withdraw cash from the ATM machines,
OK, thanks.No, It hasn't been lost or stolen, I was just wondering if it could be used if it were.
The company's who issue these cards are making it easy for the thief to use them, maybe if the first or last 4 digits were removed and only the card holder knew them it would cut down on a lot of theft.
The answer is yes, it can. You can buy on-line just by quoting the three digit number on the back, you don't need a PIN to buy on-line - and you CAN use it in shops if the shops have moved over to these new wave-your-card-in-front-of-the-scanner thingies. IMO the scanners are fraught with problems, there is no need for anyone to prove who you are.
In addition to the other (correct) responses, it is precisely for this that Verified-by-Visa was introduced. If you haven't signed up for that, I would strongly urge you to do so immediately: http://www.visaeurope...verified_by_visa.aspx
As a slight aside, I used to work for Visa International in the late 80s and early 90s and still see some of my former work colleagues socially, a couple of whom work in Security and Fraud Prevention. Last time we met, one of them told me that fewer and fewer people are signing the backs of their credit cards these days because of chip and pin (think about it - when did you last sign for anything you bought on your card?), and they recently received a stolen credit card back from the police where the cardholder had not only written the PIN on the back but also the VbV password...
thanks, MarkRae; so that means if someone got my Visa card they could buy things over the phone with no more than the details on the card itself? I shall bear it in mind for when I begin my criminal career.
In theory, yes, although that means of purchase is seriously on the decline. Fewer and fewer retail outlets provide a telephone sales service and, as has already been pointed out, the vast majority which still do will only deliver to the genuine cardholder's billing address...
Sorry Mark, as mentioned in that post above, I was thinking of ordering off the internet.....I always order my stuff online.
The whole idea is to have extra protection with VBV, so I would think you'd need to give a password though, even on the telephone. Perhaps someone who's used it that way will clarify.