Ian Hermon from Thales e-Security commented on the latest news about limit put on contactless card payments will rise from £20 to £30 from September.
[su_note note_color=”#ffffcc” text_color=”#00000″]Ian Hermon from Thales e-Security :
The rise in contactless spend limit will come as good news for consumers, extending the size of shopping basket for which they can enjoy the seamless ‘tap and go’ experience. Contactless security has been on the receiving end of some negative – and misleading – headlines of late. It’s important to note that the reported weakness is nothing to do with the card. The same information would be exposed if you left your payment card face up on a table – your primary account number and expiry date. In a Card Not Present scenario, such as online, it is the responsibility of the retailer to cross reference this information with the cardholder name, address or security code.
Contactless cards use the same technology as Chip and PIN – secure generation and loading of cryptographic keys, with Hardware Security Modules to provide the root of trust. It is testament to the strength of the underlying security infrastructure that the issuing banks are confident to accept the higher risk associated with higher value transactions, without the need for a PIN. This increase in contactless volume can easily be supported by the established four-party network (cardholder, merchant, issuer, acquirer), by simply adding more capacity, without having to re-design the architecture.[/su_note][su_box title=”About Thales e-Security” style=”noise” box_color=”#336588″]