Kuwait Times

Applying for a credit card? ‘Take a selfie’

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NEW YORK: 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 - is 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. A bank’s traditiona­l defense against stolen personal data has been a customer creating a password or four-digit personal identifica­tion number. But few people change their passwords regularly and make each one complex enough.

Often people use the same password for multiple sites, so if it’s stolen from one location, multiple other locations become at risk. —AP

 ?? —AP ?? BALTIMORE: In this file photo, credit and debit cards are displayed for a photograph­er in Baltimore.
—AP BALTIMORE: In this file photo, credit and debit cards are displayed for a photograph­er in Baltimore.

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