Friday, January 30, 2009

Fraud Through Chargebacks - How does it effect you?

The below article is on a so-called “friendly fraud”; chargebacks. How does this effect you as an ISO and what are you doing to mitigate this fraud for your business?

http://www.digitaltransactions.net/newsstory.cfm?newsid=2071

From Digital Transactions - January 30, 2009

The Recession Is Sending Rates of Friendly Fraud Up, Processors Say

(January 28, 2009) With the recession throwing more and more people out of work by the day, payments processors are reporting that their merchants are experiencing sharp increases in e-commerce chargebacks stemming from so-called friendly fraud. This is the fraud that results when a consumer repudiates a transaction as unauthorized in hopes of escaping liability for payment.

First Atlantic Commerce Ltd., an e-commerce transaction gateway in Bermuda that serves sellers of digital content, said this week that its merchants have seen a steady rise in chargebacks related to such repudiation since October, when the U.S. economy, already weak, took a decided turn for the worse. Andrea Wilson, chief executive of FAC, tells Digital Transactions News by e-mail that the combination of rising chargebacks and falling sales volumes is pushing more merchants above the allowable thresholds the card networks set for chargebacks as a proportion of card volume. “Banks that never had merchants on the global chargeback monitoring program are now getting notification from Visa and MasterCard,” she says. Merchants, she adds, “are being fined for a situation they have absolutely no control over.”

Merchants that exceed these chargeback thresholds are asked to present a plan to bring their chargebacks down within a certain period of time. Failure to control chargebacks can result in fines for acquirers, which pass them on to merchants.

The friendly fraud problem appears to be especially acute for merchants that traffic in games, music, and other digital downloads. Proof of delivery in such sales can be hard to establish, making it difficult to defend against a chargeback, and making it all the more tempting for strapped consumers to repudiate a purchase. The problem becomes even more acute given the typical lag time between the date of a transaction and when the statement arrives. During this time, a buyer in recent months may have been more likely to have lost a job, suffered a pay reduction, or seen an investment position wiped out.

Vindicia Inc., an e-commerce processor in Redwood City, Calif.., that specializes in handling transactions for digital goods, says it too has seen a larger-than-usual bulge in friendly fraud recently. Such increases are not unusual in the weeks before and after the holidays as some consumers repudiate transactions in an effort to free up credit lines for more purchases, says Sanjay Sarathy, senior vice president of marketing at Vindicia. But the recent jump, he says, has been exceptional. While the problem is hard to quantify, “we believe the economic recession has exacerbated this trend and we are starting to see that with some of our merchants whose friendly fraud volume is above normal,” he tells Digital Transactions News.

Vindicia is only starting to see this trend now because it can take as many as 90 days to challenge a chargeback, get it investigated, and get a result indicating whether it stemmed from real fraud or a case of a customer getting cold feet. Overall, online merchants challenged half of all fraud-coded chargebacks in 2008, up from 47% in 2007, according to research conducted by CyberSource Inc., a Mountain View, Calif.-based payments-gateway and risk-management provider. Of the chargebacks they represented last year, merchants won 44%, CyberSource says.

While that may seem encouraging, some processors argue merchants should do more to protect themselves against friendly fraud now that signs indicate the recession isn’t likely to lift any time soon. FAC’s Wilson, for example, urges merchants to adopt the online authentication systems created by Visa and MasterCard. These technologies, called Verified by Visa and SecureCode, ask the consumer to authenticate himself at checkout by entering a secret code presumably known only to him. Under rules that differ somewhat between the two networks, merchants that adopt the authentication systems can be protected against liability for chargebacks.

Some 27% of online merchants surveyed last fall by CyberSource were using one or the other of these authentication technologies, with 18% indicating they planned to implement it.

Posted by NAAIO at 22:32:56 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, January 23, 2009

‘Ninja thief’ tries to steal ATMs from suburban West Palm Beach bank

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/localnews/content/local_news/epaper/2009/01/08/0108ninjathief.html

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Palm Beach County sheriff’s deputies are looking for a would-be thief who seems to think he is a ninja.

The unidentified man, who was dressed in a black ninja outfit with a hood that only shows his eyes, was caught on surveillance cameras trying to steal the ATM machines outside the Colonial Bank at 152 South State Road 7 on Dec. 29 and outside a Walgreens at U.S. 441 and Okeechobee Boulevard on Tuesday.

Sheriff’s spokeswoman Teri Barbera said she did not how the man tried to steal the machines, but that he was unsuccessful in both attempts.

The thief may be wearing a ninja outfit, but he does not appear to be of the same physical stature as martial arts legends Bruce Lee or Sonny Chiba. Surveillance footage shows the heavyset man has a noticeable pot belly.

Anyone with information regarding the attempted ATM robberies or can possibly identify this suspect, is asked to contact Detective McCranels at (561) 904-8273 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-458-TIPS.

Posted by NAAIO at 15:21:07 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Boy, 15, suspected in ATM robbery arrested

A 15-year-old boy was arrested Tuesday after authorities received a tip that he allegedly was connected with an ATM robbery last month.

An ATM at Safe Credit Union at 7883 Walerga Road was burglarized just after 2 a.m. Dec. 30, Sacramento County sheriff’s Sgt. Tim Curran stated in a news release.

The subject allegedly used a metal bar to pry open the ATM but was unable to get cash, he said.

The burglary caused significant damage to the machine.

Sheriff’s deputies asked the public for help identifying the person whose picture was captured by the ATM’s security camera and detectives received a tip, which led to the arrest Tuesday.

The Antelope boy was arrested on suspicion of burglary and was booked into juvenile hall.

His identity is not being released due to his age.


Call The Bee’s Niesha Lofing, (916) 321-1270.

Posted by NAAIO at 22:12:38 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, January 19, 2009

How Are You Protecting Your ATMs from Crime?

   In this tough economy, the thieves seem to be coming out in droves. What are you doing to protect your ATMs from crime be it Pry Attacks, Transaction Fraud, Smash and Grab, or any other ATM related crime?

Posted by NAAIO at 21:45:35 | Permalink | No Comments »

NAAIO Annual Meeting Wednesday, February 11, 2009 At The Opryland Hotel In Nashville, Tennessee

Calling all current members and those in the ISO community!  You are encouraged to attend the Annual NAAIO Meeting to be held in Nashville at the Opryland Hotel in Nashville.  “I know the board is looking forward to getting together to discuss the 2009 agenda and to greet new and potential members,” says Steve Burns, President of NAAIO.

   “We see more and more ISOs and those in the ISO community wanting to participate in our association - which is great!,” he continued.  “Especially in this trying economy, the ISO community needs a cohesive voice.  That is our mission.”

    If you’d like to attend please RSVP Trish Fischer at tfischer@naaio.org Trish Fischer or via phone at 770-755-5945.  We look forward to seeing you there!

     Feel free to add any topics or comments at the NAAIO blog link below.  Have you joined yet?

Posted by NAAIO at 21:19:33 | Permalink | No Comments »

NAAIO Meets With VISA and MASTERCARD

NAAIO President Steve Burns and Ray Varcho of WRG - an active NAAIO member - met with senior executives of both MASTERCARD and VISA in November and December respectively.  “Both meetings were a tremendous success,” according to Burns.  “I think we were successful in communicating that  NAAIO will be a positive conduit between the networks and the ISO community.”

    More network meetings will be scheduled in the coming months.  Of course, we will keep the NAAIO membership and ISO community informed. 

Posted by NAAIO at 21:11:08 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Sun Visors for ATM’s???

Does anyone know where to get or if there is a manufactured sun visor that you can install on the ATM so you can see the screen better?????

—-NAAIO Member

Posted by NAAIO at 14:59:39 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tamper Errors on WRG ATMs

   Is anyone else experiencing “Tamper Errors” on WRG ATM’s? We install battery Backups but if the power is out too long, the battery backups go down and we get a Tamper Error. Does anyone know of a fix for this?

—-NAAIO Member

Posted by NAAIO at 14:56:51 | Permalink | No Comments »

Thursday, November 13, 2008

What are You Doing to Maintain Market Share in This Economy?

After reading the article “PR Insite Problem: Downturn in the Market“, that was posted in the November newsletter, what are you doing to maintain market share? Share your thoughts, tips, and concerns with your fellow NAAIO Members.
Posted by NAAIO at 21:28:30 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

MasterCard Implements Acquirer Cross-Border Transaction Assessment - Effective January 1, 2008

Mastercard LogoThe below was forwarded to NAAIO offices by NAAIO member Meta Payment Systems.

MasterCard implemented an Acquirer Cross-boarder Transaction Assessment effective January 1, 2008.  U.S. acquirers will pay an assessment of 40 basis points on all cross-border transactions for non-U.S. region issued MasterCard, Cirrus or Maestro credit or debit cards acquired from US merchants.  A credit of 10 basis points will be received when the transaction is submitted to MasterCard in US dollars.

Posted by NAAIO at 22:42:32 | Permalink | No Comments »