Archive for February, 2010

Release of EMVCo Level 2 4.2b Spec.

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

The much anticipated release of the latest EMV Level 2 test specification happened on the 5th February, and already CreditCall is working through the documents to identify changes that need to be made to its widely certified EMV software Kernel.

In addition to the test case updates to validate the implementations of all the EMV specification update bulletins that have been published during the past year, test cases are now also provided for American Express. This is the first EMVCo Level 2 test plan released since they joined MasterCard, Visa and JCB as EMVCo’s fourth member last year.

With over 100,000 users of the Kernel in Europe alone, and with customers in most regions of the world where Chip and PIN is mandated, CreditCall expects to be certifying new integration of its EmvX, EmvJ and EMV.LIB as soon as March 2010.

Link to EmvCo Bulletins

EMV Unattended Payments

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010
Metric "Aura" EMV equipped Pay-and-Display machine

Metric "Aura" EMV equipped Pay-and-Display machine

Although much of the publicity surrounding EMV “Chip and PIN” migration has related to its use in retail outlets, another market sector that has benefitted from EMV migration is Unattended Payment Terminals (UPT).

Unattended payments, where a customer uses an unsupervised terminal to pay for goods or services such as parking and vending machines or self-service kiosks, have traditionally been processed using cash. Where card payment has been supported this has been achieved by using the data from the magnetic stripe on a customer’s card, with no cardholder verification. This means that such machines are an obvious target for fraudsters trying to use stolen and cloned cards and, as there are no attendants to monitor these environments, it has been extremely difficult to crackdown on this illegal activity. This has therefore limited the growth of unattended card payments.

However, the advent of EMV cards means that secure PIN entry can now be used to verify the cardholder, and advances in communications technology means that it is also possible to quickly and safely authorise transactions with the card issuer even when there is no fixed communications infrastructure on site.

Together, these developments have fuelled a large growth in a number of unattended environments, including car parking, transport ticketing, automated supermarket lanes and other self-service kiosks vending higher value goods, as vendors can now have confidence that every transaction is genuine and they will always receive their payment.

This is just one example of the benefits that EMV migration can bring. The CreditCall EMV Kernels provide a simple but powerful way to add EMV Level 2 capability to payment devices. Check out www.emvx.co.uk for further details of these EMV Level 2 Kernels.