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EMV Migration Forum Provides Guidance for Contactless Debit Transactions in White Paper Addendum

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  • EMV Migration Forum Provides Guidance for Contactless Debit Transactions in White Paper Addendum
EMV Migration Forum Provides Guidance for Contactless Debit Transactions in White Paper Addendum

Princeton Junction, N.J., May 6, 2015 – The EMV Migration Forum is providing new guidance to the U.S. debit payments industry by releasing today a document to enhance their technical EMV debit framework. The addendum to the industry-supported framework addresses contactless transactions for EMV debit transactions, “Addendum I – U.S. Common Debit Contactless Acceptance,” can be downloaded at http://www.emv-connection.com/u-s-debit-emv-technical-proposal/.

This document provides an example to help financial institutions successfully achieve contactless multi-network transaction processing while preserving global interoperability using a U.S. Common Debit compliant EMV application configuration.

“The EMV Migration Forum works at a high level to address challenges and provide resources that benefit the entire payments industry. Part of this means to add new resources to address industry questions,” said Randy Vanderhoof, director of the EMV Migration Forum. “The addendum to the EMV debit framework provides an example approach for terminal vendors, acquirers and merchants to successfully implement contactless and mobile EMV debit using the U.S. Common Debit AID.”

Topics addressed in the addendum include:

  • Fundamentals – Contactless Acceptance – The framework defined in the EMV Migration Forum U.S. Debit EMV Technical Proposal is compatible with a contactless transaction when implemented on a dual interface EMV chip card or a mobile device
  • U.S. EMV Common Debit Compliant Issuance – Financial institutions considering issuance of mobile payment credentials or dual Interface EMV debit cards have the option to deploy a U.S. Common Debit compliant EMV application configuration
  • CVM Processing – Online PIN, Signature and No CVM may be supported as per the payment networks’ specifications
  • U.S. Common Debit AID Selection – A chart illustrates an example flow for the merchant making a decision to select the U.S. Common Debit AID

More information on the original “U.S. Debit EMV Technical Proposal” can be found at http://bit.ly/1begUEC.

About U.S. EMV Chip Migration

Commonly used globally in place of magnetic stripe, EMV chip technology helps to reduce card fraud in a face-to-face card-present environment; provides global interoperability; and enables safer transactions across contact and contactless channels. Chip implementation was initiated in the U.S. market in 2011 and 2012 when American Express, Discover, MasterCard and Visa announced their roadmaps for supporting a chip-based payments infrastructure. Acquirer processor readiness mandates to support EMV were established for 2013, with liability shifts for managing fraud risk in a face-to-face environment set for 2015.

About the EMV Migration Forum

The EMV Migration Forum is a cross-industry body focused on supporting the EMV chip implementation steps required for payment networks, issuers, processors, merchants, and consumers to help ensure a successful introduction of more secure chip technology in the United States. The focus of the Forum is to address topics that require some level of industry cooperation and/or coordination to migrate successfully to chip technology in the United States. For more information on the EMV Migration Forum, please visit http://www.emv-connection.com/us-payments-forum/

Contact

Michael Smith
Montner Tech PR
203-226-9290
[email protected]

 

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About the U.S. Payments Forum

The U.S. Payments Forum is a cross-industry body focused on addressing issues that require broad cooperation and coordination across many constituents in the payments industry. The Forum is an affiliated organization of the Secure Technology Alliance, founded in August 2012 as the EMV Migration Forum, and renamed in the U.S. Payments Forum in 2016 to include other new and emerging payments technologies in the United States.

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Members of the media interested in learning about and accurately reporting on current and emerging payments technologies in the U.S., such as EMV, tokenization, encryption, and mobile and contactless payments, should visit our Media Resources page.

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