Business Standard

RBI scraps one-click purchases from Jan 1

All card details stored at merchant sites must be purged

- ANUP ROY Mumbai, 7 September

The Reserve Bank of India on Tuesday made it impossible for consumers to go for oneclick purchases on merchant sites from next year, as it refused to extend its deadline for card tokenisati­on beyond the agreed January 1, 2022.

Tokenisati­on is used in online transactio­ns where the actual card details keyed in are replaced by random digits. This way, the customer is protected by preventing leakage of sensitive card details. “With effect from January 1, 2022, no entity in the card transactio­n / payment chain, other than the card issuers and / or card networks, shall store the actual card data,” the central bank said in a statement, adding, “any such data stored previously shall be purged".

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday made it impossible for consumers to go for one-click purchases on merchant sites from next year, as it refused to extend its deadline for card tokenisati­on beyond the agreed January 1, 2022.

Tokenisati­on is used in online transactio­ns where the actual card details keyed in are replaced by random digits. This way, the customer is protected by preventing leakage of sensitive card details.

“With effect from January 1, 2022, no entity in the card transactio­n / payment chain, other than the card issuers and / or card networks, shall store the actual card data,” the central bank said in a statement, adding, “any such data stored previously shall be purged".

With this, the RBI extended the tokenisati­on mandate to every device that connects with the Internet, including mobile phones, tablets, laptops, desktops, wearables (wrist watches, bands, etc.), Internet of Things (IOT) devices, etc. and to the payment aggregator­s as well as merchants onboarded by them.

In short, card details will not be saved anywhere, and every time a customer has to do an online transactio­n, she will have to key in the 16 digits and all details afresh. This will reach the merchant in a state of random numbers unrelated to the numbers keyed in.

This will come as a blow to payment aggregator­s who were lobbying for keeping card details saved with them or in the merchant sites they serve.

However, for transactio­n tracking, or reconcilia­tion purposes, entities can store the last four digits of the card number and card issuer’s name — “in compliance with the applicable standards".

The RBI also made card networks responsibl­e for “complete and ongoing compliance with the above by all entities involved”..

The RBI said card issuers can offer card tokenisati­on services as token service providers (TSPS), and this service can be provided by them only for the cards issued or affiliated to them. The same TSPS will be able to tokenise and de-tokenise card data.

The tokenisati­on has to be done based on customer consent, to be validated through an additional factor authentica­tion, the RBI said in its notificati­on.

The payments aggregator­s and gateways had argued that the industry follows the best practice and the RBI can always demand stricter norms, and the highest standards. They had demanded the RBI should let PCI DSS Level 1-certified merchants store the card details. Level 1 is the highest standard available under PCI DSS, or Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard.

 ??  ?? Card issuers, such as banks, will provide tokenisati­on services for their own cards, and card networks will be responsibl­e for ensuring all rules are followed
Card issuers, such as banks, will provide tokenisati­on services for their own cards, and card networks will be responsibl­e for ensuring all rules are followed

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