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- ===============================================================================
- Basic Information About Credit Cards
- ===============================================================================
-
- There are at least three types of security devices on credit cards that
- you aren't supposed to know about. They are the account number, the signature
- panel, and the magnetic strip.
-
-
- The Account Number
- ------------------
- A Social Security card has nine digits. So do two-part Zip codes.
- A domestic phone number, including area code, has ten digits. Yet a
- complete MasterCard number has twenty digits. Why so many?
- It is not mathematically necessary for any credit-card account number
- to have more than eight digits. Each cardholder must, of course, have a
- unique number. Visa and MasterCard are estimated to have about sixty-five
- million cardholders each. Thus their numbering systems must have at least
- sixty-five million available numbers.
- There are one hundred million possible conbinations of eight digits--
- 00000000, 00000001, 00000002, 00000003, all the way up to 99999999. So
- eight digits would be enough. To allow for future growth, an issuer the
- size of Visa of MaserCard could opt for nine digits---enough for a billion
- differnt numbers.
- In fact, a Visa card has thirteen digits and sometimes more. An
- American Express card has fifteen digits. Diners Club cards have fourteen.
- Carte Blanche has ten. Obviously, the card issuers are not projecting
- that they will have billions and billions of cardholders and need those
- digits to ensure a different number for each. The extra digits are actually
- a security device.
- Say your Visa number is 4211 503 417 268. Each purchase must be
- entered into a computer from a sales slip. The account number tags the
- purchase to your account. The persons who enter account numbers into
- computers get bored and sometimes make mistakes. They might enter
- 4211 503 471 268 or 4211 703 417 268 instead.
- The advantage of the thirteen-digit numbering system is that it is
- unlikely any Visa cardholder has 4211 503 471 268 or 4211 703 417 268
- for an account number. There are 10 trillion possible thirteen-digit
- Visa numbers (0000 000 000 000;0000 000 000 0001;... 9999 999 999 999).
- Only about sixty-five million of those numbers are numbers of actual
- active accounts. The odds that an incorrectly entered number would
- correspond to a real number are something like sixty-five million in
- ten trillion, or about one in one hundred and fifty thousand.
- Those are slim odds. You could fill up a book the size of this one
- {note, book is 228 pgs long} with random thirteen-digit numbers such as
- these:
-
- 3901 160 943 791
- 1090 734 231 410
- 1783 205 995 561
- 9542 425 195 969
- 2358 862 307 845
- 9940 880 814 778
- 8421 456 150 662
- 9910 441 036 483
- 3167 186 869 267
- 6081 132 670 781
- 1228 190 300 350
- 4563 351 105 207
-
- Still you would not duplicate a Visa account number. Whenever an account
- number is entered incorrectly, iw will almose certainly fail to match up
- with any of the other account nubmers in the computer's memory. The
- computer can then request that the number be entered again.
- Other card-numbering systems are even more secure. Of the quadrillion
- possible fifteen-digit American Express card numbers, only about 11 million
- are assigned. The chance of a random number happening to correspond to an
- existing account number is about one in ninety million. Taking into account
- all twenty digits on a MasterCard, there are one hundred quintillion
- (100,000,000,000,000,000,000) possible numvers for sixy-five million card-
- holders. The chance of a random string of digits matching a real MasterCard
- number is about one in one and a half trillion.
- Among other things, this makes possible those television ads inviting
- holders of credit cards to phone in to order merchandise. The operators
- who take the calls never see the callers' cards nor their signatures.
- How can they be sure the callers even have credit cards?
- They base their confidence on the security of the credit-card numbering
- systems. If someone calls in and makes up a creditcard number--even being
- careful to get the right number of digits--the number surely will not be
- an existing real credit-card number. The deception can be spotted instantly
- by plugging into the credit-card company's computers. For all practical
- purposes, the only way to come up with a genuine credit-card number is to
- read it off a credit card. The number, not the piece of plastic, is
- enough.
-
-
- Neiman-Marcus' Garbage Can
- --------------------------
- The converse of this is the fact that anyone who knows someone else's card
- number can charge to that person's account. Police sources say this is a
- major problem, but card issuers, by and large, do their best to keep these
- crimes a secret. The fear is that publicizing the crimes may tempt more
- people to commit them. Worse yet, there is alomost nothing the average
- person can do to prevent being victimized {muhaha} -- short of giving up
- credit cards entirely.
- Lots of strangers know your credit-card numbers. Everyone you hand
- a card to--waiters, sales clerks, ticket agents, hairdressers, gas station
- attendants, hotel cashiers--sees the account number. Every time a card is
- put in an imprinter, three copies are made, and two are left with the clerk.
- If you charge anything by phone or mail order, someone somewhere sees the
- number.
- Crooks don't have to be in a job with normal access to creditcard numbers.
- Occasional operations have discovered that the garbage cans outside prestige
- department or specialty stores are sources of high-credit-limit account
- numbers. The crooks look for the discarded carbon paper from sales slips.
- The account number is usually legible--as are the expiration date, name,
- and signature. (A 1981 operation used carbons from Koontz Hardware, a
- West Hollywood, California, store frequented by many celebrities.)
- Converting a number into cash is less risky than using a stolen
- credit card. The crook need only call an airline, posing as the cardholder,
- and make a reservation on a heavily traveled flight. He usually requests
- that tickets be issued in someone else's name for pickup at the airport
- (airlines don't always ask for ID on ticket pickups, but the crook has it
- if needed) and is set. The tickets can be sold at a discount on the hot-
- ticket market operating in every major airport.
- There are other methods as well. Anyone with a Visa or MasterCard
- merchant account can fill out invoices for nonexistent sales and submit
- them to the bank. As long as the account numbers and names are genuine,
- the bank will pay the merchant immediately.
- For an investment of about a thousand dollars, an organized criminal
- operation can get the pressing machines needed to make counterfeit credit
- cards. Counterfeiting credit cards in relatively simple. There are no
- fancy scrolls and filigree work, just blocky logos in primary colors.
- From the criminal's standpoint, the main advantage of a counterfeit card
- is that it allows him to get cash advances. For maximum plundering of a
- line of credit, the crook must know the credit limit as well as the account
- number. To learn both, he often calls an intended victim, posing as the
- victim's bank:
-
- CROOK: This is Bank of America. We're calling to tell you that the
- credit limit on your Visa card has been raised to twelve
- hundred dollars.
- VICTIM: But my limit has always been ten thousand dollars.
- CROOK: There must be some problem with the computers. Do you have
- your card handy? Could you read off the embossed number?
-
-
- On a smaller scale, many struggling rock groups have discovered the
- knack of using someone else's telephone company credit card. When a
- cardholder wants to make a long-distance call from a hotel or pay phone,
- he or she reads the card number to the operator. The call is then billed
- to the cardholder's home phone. Musicians on tour sometimes wait by the
- special credit-card-and-collect-calls-only booths at airports and jot
- down a few credit card numbers. In this way, unsuspecting businesspeople
- finance a touring act's calls to friends at home. If the musicians call
- from public phones, use a given card number only once, and don't stay
- in one city long, the phone company seems helpless to stop them.
- What makes all of these scams so hard to combat is the lead
- time afforded the criminal. Theft of a credit card--a crime that
- card issuers will talk about--is generally reported immediately.
- Within twenty-four hours, a stolen card's number is on the issuer's
- "hot list" and can no longer be used. But when only a card number is
- being used illicitly, the crime is not discovered until the
- cardholder recieves his first inflated bill. That's at least two
- weeks later; it could be as much as six weeks later. As long as the
- illicit user isn't too greedy, he has at least two weeks to tap into
- a credit line with little risk.
-
-
- The Signature Panel
- -------------------
- You're now supposed to erase the signature panel, of course. Card
- issuers fear that crooks might erase the signature on a stolen credit
- card and replace it with their own. To make alteration more difficult,
- many card signature panels have a background design that rubs off if
- anyone tries to erase. There's the "fingerprint" design on the American
- Express panel, repeated Visa or MasterCard logos on some bank cards, and the
- "Safesig" desgn on others. The principle is the same as with the security
- paper used for checks. If you try to earse a check on security paper, the
- wavy-line pattern erases, leaving a white area-- and it is obvious that the
- check has been altered.
- Rumors hint of a more elaborate gimmick in credit-card panels.
- It is said that if you erase the panel, a secret word--VOID--appears
- to prevent use of the card. To test this rumor, fifteen common credit
- cards were sacrificed.
- An ordinary pen eraser will erase credit-card signature panels, if
- slowly. The panels are more easily removed with a cloth and a dry-cleaning
- fluid such as Energine. This method dissolves the panels cleanly. Of the
- fifteen cards tested, six had nothing under the panel(other than a
- continuation of the card back design, where there was one). Nine cards
- tested had the word "VOID" under the panel. In all cases, the VOIDs
- were printeed small and repeated many times under the panel. The breakdown:
-
- Void Device Nothing
- --------------------------------------
- Bloomingdale's American Express Gold Card
- Bonwit Teller Broadway
- Bullock's MasterCard(Citibank)
- Chase Convenience B.C. Neiman-Marcus
- I. Magnin Robinson's
- Joseph Magnin Saks Fifth Avenue
- First Interstate B.C.
- Montgomery Ward
- Visa (Chase Manhattan)
-
-
- When held to a strond light, the VOIDs were visible through the Blooming-
- dales's card even without removing the panel.
- The VOID device isn't foolproof. Any crimianl who learns the secret
- will simply refrain from trying to earse the signature. Most salesclerks
- don't bother to check signatures anyway.
- Moreover, it is possible to paint the signature panel back in, over
- the VOIDs--at least on those cards that do not have a design on the
- panel. (Saks' panel is a greenish-tan khaki coler that would be difficult
- to match with paint.) The panel is first removed with dry-cleaning fluid.
- The back of the card is covered with masking tape, leaving a window where
- the replacement panel is to go. A thin coat of flat white spray paint
- simulates the original panel.
-
-
- The Magnetic Strip
- ------------------
-
- The other security device on the back of the card, the brown magnetic
- strip, is more difficult to analyze. Some people think there are sundry
- personal details about the cardholder stored in the strip. But the
- strip has no more information capacitythan a similar snippet of recording tape.
- For the most part banks are reticent about the strip.
-
- The strip need not contain any information other than the account
- number or similar indentification. Any futher information needed to
- complete an automatic-teller transaction-- such as current account
- balances--can be called up from bank computers and need not be encoded
- in the strip.
- Evidently, the card expiration date is in the strip. Expired cards
- are "eaten" by automatic-teller machines even when the expired card has
- the same account number and name as its valid replacement card. Credit
- limit, address, phone number, employer, etc, must not be indicated in
- this strip, for banks do not issue new cards just because this info changes.
- It is not clear if the personal identification number is in the strip
- or called up from the bank computer. Many automatic-teller machines have
- a secret limit of three attempts for provideing the correct personal
- identification nubmer. After three wround attempts, the "customer" is
- assumed to be a crook with a stolen card, going through all possible
- permutations--and the card is eaten.
- It is possible to scramble the information in the strip by rubbing
- a pocket magnet over it. Workers in hspitals or research facilites with
- large electromagnets sometimes find that their cards no longer work in
- automatic-teller machines. (If you try to use a magnetically doctored
- card, you usually get a message to the effect, "Your card may be inserted
- incorrectly. Please remove and insert according to the diagram.")
-
-
- The Bloomingdale's Color Code
- -----------------------------
- Only in a few cases does the color of a credit card mean anything.
- There are, of course, the American Express, Visa, and MasterCard gold
- cards for preferred customers. The Air Travel Card comes in red and green, of
- which green is better. (With red, you can charge tickets for travel within
- North America only.) The most elaborate color scheme, and a source of some
- confusion to status-conscious queues, is that of Bloomingdale's credit
- department, here is how it works: Low color in the pecking order is blue,
- issued to Bloomingdale employees as a perk in their compensation packages. The
- basic Bloomingdale card is yellow. Like most department store cards, it can be
- used to spread payments over several months with the payment of a finance
- charge. The red card gives holders three months' free interest and is issued
- to customers who regularly make large purchases. The silver card is good for
- unlimited spending, but as with a travel and entertainment card, all charges
- must be paid in thirty days. The gold card offers the same payment options as
- the yellow card but is reserved for the store's biggest spenders.
-
-
- The End
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Comments and Acknowledgements-
-
- The above has been copied from "Big Secrets" WITHOUT permission.
- Big Secrets is written by Willian Poundstone. This is a great
- book that tells you hundreds of things you weren't suppose to
- find out about. The above artical, was only 5 pages out of
- a book 288 pages long! He also has a new book out called
- "Bigger Secrets", which is also good. You can find both at
- almost anybook store, they should be able to special order it.
-
- Well it's now midnight, and i'm getting tried... so I hope
- you have enjoyed this artical, if you wanna talk to me I'm
- on many boards all over the country. Well later, i'm gonna go
- watch Star Trek the Next Generation...
-
- The above was written by
- The
- /\/\idnight
- Caller
-
- a.k.a.
- Pizzia Man
-
-
-
-
-
- Downloaded From P-80 International Information Systems 304-744-2253 12yrs+
-