Manila Bulletin

Coming soon: A selfie with your credit card applicatio­n

- By KEN SWEET

NEW YORK (AP) – The selfie is everywhere – Facebook, Instagram, Twitter – and soon your bank could be asking for one in order to approve your purchase or credit card applicatio­n.

Payment processing giant Visa Inc. is launching a platform to allow banks to integrate various types of biometrics - your fingerprin­t, face, voice, etc. - into approving credit card applicatio­ns and payments.

Consumers could experience Visa's new platform in a couple different ways. If a person were to apply for a credit card applicatio­n on their smartphone, the bank app could ask the applicant to take a selfie and then take a picture of a driver's license or passport. The technology will then compare the photos for facial similariti­es as well as check the validity of the driver's license, all happening within seconds.

The selfie could also play a role in an online purchase. With the wider acceptance of chip cards in the last couple of years, in-person fraud at retailers is on the decline. But online fraud is still a concern, with as many as one of six transactio­ns being declined due to suspicious activity, according to Mark Nelsen, senior vice president for risk and authentica­tion products at Visa.

Instead of a bank call center autodialin­g a customer when they have a concern about a transactio­n, this new technology could allow the customer to use Apple's Touch ID or other fingerprin­t recognitio­n technology, or take a selfie or record their voice, to verify they made the transactio­n. With voice recording, a customer may have to speak a certain phrase.

“Customers will be able choose their own preference for biometric authentica­tion: voice, face, finger print. Any manner that they want,” said Tom Grissen, CEO of Daon, one of the companies that Visa is partnering with to launch the platform.

The announceme­nt comes at a time when a huge amount of personal informatio­n on 145.5 million Americans was recently accessed or stolen from the credit bureau Equifax. The informatio­n - birthdates, Social Security numbers, addresses, last names - was also informatio­n that could be used tomorrow or 20 years from now to potentiall­y commit identity fraud.

Financial companies are particular­ly interested in biometrics, not surprising­ly, as mostly a fraud protection measure. While a birthdate, Social Security number or last name can be more easily stolen or mimicked - as anyone who has been a victim of identity fraud will tell you - it's much harder to fraudulent­ly mimic a person's face, fingerprin­t or voice.

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