Mastercard To Phase Out Manual Card Entry For Online Payments In Europe By 2030 (www.cnbc.com)
from pedroapero@lemmy.ml to cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works on 12 Jun 20:42
https://lemmy.ml/post/16803600

Starting from 2030, Mastercard will no longer require Europeans to enter their card numbers manually when checking out online – no matter what platform or device they’re using. Mastercard will announce Tuesday in a fireside chat with CNBC that, by 2030, all cards it issues on its network in Europe will be tokenized. In other words, instead of the 16-digit card number we’re all accustomed to using for transactions, this will be replaced with a randomly generated “token.”

The firm says it’s been working with banks, fintechs, merchants and other partners to phase out manual card entry for e-commerce by 2030 in Europe, in favor of a one-click button across all online platforms. This will ensure that consumers’ cards are secure against fraud attempts, Mastercard says. Users won’t have to keep entering passwords every time they try to make a payment, as Mastercard is introducing passkeys that replace passwords.

#cybersecurity

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Godort@lemm.ee on 12 Jun 21:32 next collapse

This feels like a really good idea. I hope we get this in Canada too

TonyTonyChopper@mander.xyz on 12 Jun 22:33 collapse

by 2030 the Canadian peso will be so weak you’ll spend a million dollars getting groceries

Manzas@lemdro.id on 13 Jun 08:46 collapse

The fuck is a Canadian peso?

TonyTonyChopper@mander.xyz on 13 Jun 17:25 collapse

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loonie

Manzas@lemdro.id on 14 Jun 07:15 collapse

It is called the canadian dollar

twinnie@feddit.uk on 12 Jun 21:36 next collapse

I’m always down for stuff like this but it doesn’t sound much different from having to approve the payment in the app or using one of those single-use cards. I’ll wait and see how the passkey works.

Whirling_Cloudburst@lemmy.world on 12 Jun 22:00 next collapse

Consumers will be able to make one-click payments at the checkout page using biometric authentication with a thumbprint

That’s a nope from me, dog.

mindbleach@sh.itjust.works on 13 Jun 12:46 next collapse

My PC doesn’t even have a microphone.

greyfox@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 20:20 collapse

This is likely something like a FIDO token/passwordless setup of some sort (i.e. Windows Hello).

The thumbprint would just unlock the hardware device, so the thumbprint itself wouldn’t need to be transmitted to your credit issuer. This gives you full two factor authentication of your identity because you need the hardware device (something you have) and your biometric (something you are). They also often allow pins (something you know) instead of biometrics as the second factor.

terraborra@lemmy.nz on 12 Jun 22:35 next collapse

Yeah, I’m not giving them biometrics. There had better be an alternative option.

uhN0id@programming.dev on 12 Jun 22:43 next collapse

The first thing I thought was “what’s the alternative?” If I don’t do biometrics on my phone then why would I do it for my credit card? I’m American so I don’t have to worry about this yet but it’s probably an indicator of what’s coming here.

normalexit@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 18:04 next collapse

It’d be cool if they had a yubikey integration or some other hardware based solution where you must physically present it.

oktoberpaard@feddit.nl on 14 Jun 10:37 collapse

I might be wrong, but I think they will probably let the OS handle the biometrics offline, which means that they won’t have access to your biometrics, they just work with cryptographic keys. Otherwise it doesn’t make sense, as apps usually don’t have direct access to the fingerprint reader. It will probably be similar to how a passkey works.

IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world on 12 Jun 22:53 next collapse

If NFC was ubiquitous across all devices I could see something like this working relatively easily. But given the matrix of devices, operating systems, web browsers, apps, etc. I don’t see this as an easy task at all…

MajorHavoc@programming.dev on 13 Jun 01:30 next collapse

Sure. Because “working with banks, fintechs, merchants” was a swift friendly collaboration when moving to chip and PIN…

(/sarcasm … Because it was not.)

I’m pressing X to ‘doubt’ on this one.

Edit: I’m American. It’s a good point that Europe has historically done a much better job with payment security.

EinfachUnersetzlich@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 05:40 collapse

In Europe it was relatively smooth though, in my experience. I worked in a shop when it was rolled out. I’m guessing you’re American?

MajorHavoc@programming.dev on 13 Jun 14:18 collapse

Good guess.

Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 18:30 collapse

Your banking systems are two decades behind everyone else. Please rejoin this thread in 2044 thanks 😂

MajorHavoc@programming.dev on 13 Jun 19:42 collapse

Ouch. But very fair.

lud@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 06:49 next collapse

Interesting but I just memorized my card numbers. It’s incredibly convenient and I recommend everyone to do it.

This might improve security though, because instead of using the same numbers everywhere you use different tokens everywhere.

It would be cool if computers could use their smart card readers (Chip and NFC) to pay stuff online.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 20:04 next collapse

no more custom roms if you want to actually pay for stuff. awesome.

njm1314@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 21:51 next collapse

Oh fuck that so much

EmperorHenry@infosec.pub on 14 Jun 21:59 collapse

But guys! This isn’t going to be hackable at all! And it’s certainly not going to be a problem for problematic gamblers or anyone with compulsive spending habits

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 15 Jun 19:51 collapse

That isn’t a concern and it shouldn’t be. People are responsible for themselves, why should I be inconvenienced because progressive iterative improvements could negatively impact a select few people that are entirely responsible for themselves?

As for hackable, they would not do it unless it was more secure and if it is easier for the consumer what is the problem. Fraud protection is standard here anyway, never heard of someone not getting their money back when someone else uses their account.

EmperorHenry@infosec.pub on 16 Jun 21:56 collapse

consumer

We aren’t consumers, We’re citizens, we’re customers, we’re users, but we aren’t consumers.

Cars consume gasoline and diesel, fire consumes whatever it’s burning, but people are people.

Squizzy@lemmy.world on 17 Jun 09:43 collapse

You are a consumer don’t be pedantic, you are creating the negative connotation.