The Never-Ending Dance Of Contactless Security
February 2nd, 2012Interestingly enough, there's truth on both sides. But the dance of demo-and-explanation seems to never slow.Read more...
Interestingly enough, there's truth on both sides. But the dance of demo-and-explanation seems to never slow.Read more...
But PayPal's approach—which essentially reverses 50 years of payment-card advances by eliminating any physical authentication device—still presents a big challenge when it comes to security. The ability to check out with just a mobile phone number and PIN—no plastic card, NFC-enabled phone or other authentication hardware required—means anyone who can acquire that phone number plus PIN has a free shot at the legitimate customer's account.Read more...
If a marketing opt-in question is posed, who is posing it? And how will customers react when they later learn they weren't sharing with whom they thought they were sharing? Bad news: This is not hypothetical. There is a broader issue at play here. With any of the third-party mobile payment efforts—Google Wallet, PayPal, ISIS, maybe even Apple—there is the potential for this type of confusion.Read more...
Clearly, one errant employee is something every chain has. But this example brings up a too-often overlooked PCI fact: Compliance is an issue for every employee. Mobile payment, being a disruptive factor, will only make things worse, because it creates many more opportunities for payment-card data to be captured/retained against the rules.Read more...
It's time to evict Web and mobile app development, and pretty much any marketing initiative that isn't core to your business. Heresy? Certainly, pens Retail Columnist Todd Michaud. But it's necessary.Read more...
If a PayPal card triggers a transaction on an underlying Visa or MasterCard, might that PayPal account be considered a "high-value token" and, therefore, be in scope for PCI? And if the PayPal account is in scope, is it a big deal? Read more...
"When I think about secondary validation, that gives me more of a warm fuzzy even though we have people saying that I have a more sophisticated chip and that my smart device has got some protection sitting in it," said Bill Titus, the Loss Prevention VP at Sears. Read more...
But it was the unequivocal declaration that payment systems had not been touched that raised eyebrows. At this early stage of a breach investigation—knowing that cyberthieves tend to be quite good at hiding their tracks and creating misleading tracks—is such a blanket promise to customers reckless?Read more...
"The E-receipt problem is that the customer now has a valid receipt. I can't bring it in. I'm not checking it off and signing off on it. So the ability to use that fraudulently increases unless you have a true returns management system," Titus said.Read more...
The shift in emphasis from compliance to being secure is not new, but PCI Columnist Walter Conway was struck by how pronounced a perspective change retailers are experiencing.Read more...
The conceal part of that action is considered evidence of criminal intent. Now let's see you try and enforce that rule when you have in-aisle mobile checkout.Read more...
The POS defense has been that chains need hardened systems. That argument worked when tablets were $500 and even $400. But now that Android tablets have fallen below $100, the argument falls apart. You could have four spares in the backroom and still be ahead.Read more...
The lawsuit is challenging everything from issuing banks' contracts to Visa's claims for counting up card fraud and pinpointing who's to blame—in addition to $1.3 million in card fraud that Visa says the restaurant enabled via an alleged security breach for which there's no concrete evidence. Read more...
On the mobile front, it's the first retail trial of PayPal's mobile payment program and it doesn't use a mobile device at all. (OK, that's more an embryo step than a baby step.) On the payment front, this is also a test of Home Depot accepting a rectangular magstripe card that doesn't say MasterCard, Visa, American Express, Discover or Home Depot on it.Read more...
We have our early clues from the CIO of the $2.5-billion 481-store Guess chain, one of the first test sites for Google Wallet in "a couple of stores" in California since May. In total, how many customers have tried Google Wallet? Says CIO Michael Relich: "Five or six." Not 500 or 600 customers, mind you. Five or six. Read more...
But the Guess iPad trial is hardly being done to save costs. The flexibility of the tablets and sharp, customer-friendly graphics make the devices a much more effective way to show demos and to locate merchandise, check inventory and do anything else that a kiosk would normally do.Read more...
In-aisle mobile payment isn’t merely a new payment method. It has the potential to force stores to rethink almost all aspects of operations—and few have seriously come to terms with how different environments are going to have to be. At the NRF show in New York City next week, a StorefrontBacktalk IT panel is going to map out the least-anticipated changes. And if you’re around on Tuesday 2–3 PM (1A 21/22 at the Javits Center), please drop by and tell us what we forgot to include. Ann Taylor CIO Mike Sajor, Sears VP/Loss Prevention Bill Titus and the NRF’s Joe Larocca—moderated by StorefrontBacktalk Editor Evan Schuman&mdashlwill look at the neglected items. As a Florida hobby shop discovered while serving as an NCR in-aisle mobile payment beta tester, this in-store mobile payment stuff is a lot harder than it looks.
“It’s really a change management problem,” Sajor said. “Literally everyone has to think through all of the possible change behaviors.” As Sears thinks through in-store mobile issues, it’s seeing how everything will need to change, from the supply chain to customer interactions to SKU-level integrity, inventory and dealing with new threats to the supply chain. “Some significant competitive advantages are going to be lost,” Titus said. The panel will be pure discussion, with no presentations and lots of audience interaction. So please argue with us there. Don’t make me come and find you.…
The good vendors will be able to address all these questions. The not-so-good ones will hand you a carrier bag or a pen instead. Read more...
But it is clear that Amazon is drooling over its vast CRM files and trying to figure out how much money it can make off them.Read more...
What started this holiday dogfight was an Amazon promotion, where it was offering a tiny discount (5 percent, with a ceiling of $5) for people who scanned barcodes and then purchased the item on Amazon. eBay's response was what it billed as a $10 in-store coupon, with three retailers: Toys "R" Us, Dick's Sporting Goods and Aéropostale.Read more...
The good news is that this approach, in theory, will be free to retailers, because it will not necessitate any store IT changes at all. The problem—and it's a deal-killer—is timing. With the mobile onslaught, quick is almost certainly going to trump free.Read more...
There is more to protecting sensitive areas than installing video cameras. The second, and possibly thornier, concern for small and midsize merchants is how effective the reminder is likely to be when many of them mistakenly think they won't need to follow the advice.Read more...
The essence of the attacks' success leveraged two weaknesses: different unsecured remote-access packages used by various franchisees of Subway, which enabled easy Internet access to POS systems; and card swipes with minimal encryption. That meant key-capture software installed by the cyberthieves was able to grab data in the clear, as it was being swiped.Read more...
Why? Because although what it was doing to those physical stores was likely legal, had those stores tried doing the same to Amazon, it would have been illegal, thanks to Amazon's posted policies. That policy phrasing is not even universal—or even common— among major E-tailers, pens Legal Columnist Mark Rasch.Read more...
As is our tradition, StorefrontBacktalk shuts down for the last two weeks in December, due to the fact that y’all are far too busy (a) supporting the biggest selling weeks of the year until December 25th, (b) supporting the biggest returns-and-exchanges week of the year after December 25th and (c) closing the quarterly books until December 31st on what everyone hopes will be a bigger year than 2010.
That means our next regular weekly issue will arrive on January 5th, 2012. In the meantime, everything else will still be live (the Web sites, our Kindle version, our Twitter tweets, our mobile sites, etc.). And we’ll, as always, send out breaking news alerts if circumstances merit. …