CONSUMERS
and businesses should learn to protect their credit cards, ATM cards
and other access devices to avoid being victimized by fraud, U.S. Secret
Service special agent Glen T. Peterson said.
In the credit card and
currency training session he conducted in the Saipan Chamber of Commerce
conference room last week, Peterson said more than 10,000 credit card
transactions are made every second around the world and that credit card
fraud cost banks about $1 billion each year.
E-merchants are also victims of credit card fraud, he added.
He said fraud rates outside the U.S. are
higher and credit card fraud is usually done through skimming, hacking,
phishing or scams as well as through lost, stolen or counterfeit credit
cards.
Safety tips
Peterson said to prevent credit card fraud, retailers must be aware of policies, procedures and security features.
Warning signs to watch for: a customer
offering a credit card but refusing to offer identification; the name of
the credit card is different from the identification card; the card is
unsigned’ the signature appears different than the identification; the
card has already expired.
Peterson said retailers should use a UV
black light to detect the holograms in the credit cards, the embossing,
the magnetic stripe for the Uniform Commercial Code and the signature
panel. Counterfeit cards usually lack these security features.
Consumers are also urged to secure
credit cards and PIN numbers, limit skimming possibilities and report
lost or stolen cards immediately. They should not leave cards
unattended, must not respond to unsolicited email that request you to
provide sensitive information like date of birth, Social Security
number, bank account information and other personal information.
First published HERE
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