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Credit card frauds and how to prevent them


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Credit card frauds and how to prevent them
So driven are we by capitalism that we must possess at least one credit card, if not two. If one uses a credit card wisely, he or she can gain by building up good credit rating which can go a long way when applying for a loan, renting a car or staying at a hotel.

Credit Card Fraud Prevention

Credit Card Fraud Prevention

Because of its popularity, credit cards are now subject to fraud which is rampant because of scams and theft. There are many kinds of credit card frauds, such as:

  • Mail non-receipt fraud: Here, a bank sends a new or a replacement card to a customer but he does not receive it. To counter this, banks now send out inactive cards to customers who must make a call to the bank to activate it.
  • Identity theft fraud: This fraud takes place when negative elements apply for a credit card using a genuine cardholder’s card identity and bank information.
  • Lost or stolen cards: More than a quarter of all card frauds are due to theft. These cards are usually stolen from genuine cardholders while they are at the gym, office or from their unsupervised vehicles.
  • Chargeback fraud: A genuine cardholder uses his to buy goods or services. However, when his statement reaches him, he denies ever having spent the money or receiving the goods or services mentioned in the bill.
  • No card fraud: This is done without the fraudster ever holding the genuine card in his hand. This is therefore possible when he gives his credit card number and related information on the phone to dubious telemarketers and to unverified Internet sites that promote the sales of non-existent services and goods.
  • Skimming: More than 1/3 of all money lost through credit cards is through fake cards. Criminals make fake cards using the latest technology by which they skim information that each card contains on its magnetic strips and from its holograms which contain its security features.
How to prevent credit card frauds: There are several ways of preventing these frauds in various situations, such as:

1. If you are a victim of phishing:

  • Don’t reply to emails with links, even if they your bank sends them.
  • If your bank phones or mails you, confirm the genuineness of the call by using its usual contact numbers.
  • Use a spam filter on your computer to block unwanted emails.
2. If you are a victim of pharming:
  • Install virus and firewall software and update it periodically.
  • Whenever you log into your online bank account, check its genuineness before logging in your details.
  • Log off completely from your sites and browsers, particularly if you’ve been checking your bank site online or if you are working on a shared computer. Also, before logging off, empty your Recycle Bin.
  • Don’t access your bank online from a public place like an Internet café or a public wireless booth as your details could be picked up by anyone else.

3. If you are a victim of skimming:
  • Check your ATM for anything unusual.
  • Look around you when you’re at an ATM and if you find someone looking odd or suspicious, go over to another machine.
  • If you find someone watching you or trying to look over your shoulder at your computer screen, cancel the transaction and wait until he or she leaves the area before going over to an ATM machine.
  • Stand as close as possible to the cash machine. Hide the keypad with your free hand and your body so that no one behind you can see you enter your PIN.
  • Don’t let your debit or credit card be taken into an inside room of a shop, restaurant or gas station. If they must, go in with them.
  • Check any credit card statements or bank statements for any false transaction.
  • Don’t write down your PIN on a chit or show it to anyone.
4. If you are a victim of mail intercepting:
  • Cancel your old cards that you hardly ever use and any other cards you’ve stopped using.
  • Instruct your bank to stop sending you credit card cheques you didn’t ask for.
By Mithi Chinoy

Buy the Book “Fraud Prevention Techniques for Credit Card Fraud” and learn more about Credit Card Frauds and more.

Amazon.com Price: $23.95 (as of 2010-09-03 19:56:37 GMT) Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on Amazon.com at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.

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Fraud Prevention Techniques for Credit Card Fraud
 
Manufacturer: Trafford Publishing
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Product Description

Effective credit card fraud prevention programs can increase sales revenue while decreasing administration costs and fraud losses. Learn the techniques and strategies to feel secure about accepting credit cards.

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Customer Reviews

Litany of security aspects, protection mechanisms on credit cards
 
Review Date: October 26, 2006
Reviewer: Pork Chop, Lisbon, Portugal
Considering that this book has been sitting here, for quite some
time without a review, (which doesn't mean it hasn't sold
reasonably well - it may have well done so) I'll lay out its
first review.

First, the fact that this book exists, is a milestone in
e-commerce, and in self-publishing (through Canada's Trafford, no
less), considering that it's a topic that is extremely
specialized, boring, somewhat sterile, complicated yet in so many
ways present everywhere, at all times, considering there's almost
1 million ATM's, and 20 million points of sale/ merchants, around
the world taking credit cards.

If the objective of the author was to lend credibility to his
consulting business, he's succeeded considering the wealth of
information, extremely up-to-date, realistically and in a well
organized manner, on credit cards and points of sale, coupled
with the risk of fraud in that activity.

The author succeeds in giving confidence to merchants in
accepting credit cards, by explaining the litany of security
aspects, protection mechanisms and procedures that are present
during the transactions. I won't repeat what the book discusses,
but suffice to say that there are in excess of 40 chapters, most
short or medium in length, touching upon essential topics.
Obviously, with so many areas, none can be looked at in profound
detail, but this is not a drawback, considering that this book is
more of an introduction, than a how-to manual for websites,
ecommerce, software choices, or advanced security suggestions.

For those in the banking system, or working at merchant
locations, the author's instruction amounts to learning an
entirely new language, such is the terminology, the procedures,
the aspects of thinking and analyzing the "usage" aspects of
credit cards as forms of payment. As such, it can clarify,
justify, make coherent various strategies and requirements that
are seen at points of sales, and at banks for those handling
transactions which up until now were perhaps seen in isolation,
vs. as part of a greater whole, or of a larger encompassing
strategy. It assigns proper names to specific procedures and
scenarios and requirements.

For someone working in accounting, accounts receivable, at the
cash, or running a business, (a store, for example), the book is
an education on the struggle of maintaining the course vs.
abusers and fraudsters, and in how potentially difficult it can
be for store owners in maintaining their banking relationship in
face of the same abusers of "Credit cards" as forms of payment.

The author suggests that there are more volumes to be written in
the future, clearly admitting that a lot more could have been
said. Speaking for myself, a next volume would be welcome.

Lastly, perhaps 10 pages of repetition could have been edited
out of the book (such as about vbv, or securecode) or even the 4
or 5 typos seen along the 200 or so pages of the book, for
example, but, as an INTRODUCTION to the subject matter, clearly,
the author is agile in educating the reader on credit cards and
security and how they must be handled by all the parties
involved (acquirers, issuers, shoppers, merchants, etc.)
Very Disappointing
 
Review Date: December 25, 2007
Reviewer: A. Field, London, UK
While covering a wide range of topics, it does so in an extremely basic manner, and even then, with very brief, and relatively poor explanations. In fact, so basic is the coverage that it is unlikely to be of use to anyone who buys it - people who buy a book such as this are likely to already have a certain degree of knowledge on the topic.

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