Skip to main content

CreditCall unveils new EMV and mPOS solutions at CARTES 2013

In the US from October 2015, any merchant who has not completed migration to EMV-certified chipcard payment will have to carry the cost of any fraudulent transaction that it attempts to process. At CARTES 2013, and in order to help merchants de-risk and meet what is generally held to be an aggressive in-service deadline for change at a national level, multi-channel payment gateway specialist CreditCall is launching ChipDNA. This is a unique bundle, available to acquirers, processors and VARs, which d
November 19, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
New EMV and mPOS payment solutions will smooth access to revenues, says CreditCall’s Ingrid Anusic
In the US from October 2015, any merchant who has not completed migration to EMV-certified chipcard payment will have to carry the cost of any fraudulent transaction that it attempts to process.

At CARTES 2013, and in order to help merchants de-risk and meet what is generally held to be an aggressive in-service deadline for change at a national level, multi-channel payment gateway specialist CreditCall is launching ChipDNA. This is a unique bundle, available to acquirers, processors and VARs, which deals with all intermediate payment levels on behalf of the merchant, according to the company’s Head of Marketing, Ingrid Anusic.

“ChipDNA is designed to make migration simple. Merchants needn’t worry about EMV knowledge, integration or certification – it’s all taken care of,” she says.
This is all in line with the company’s philosophy of making payment acceptance simple from any device, anywhere. CreditCall will also be highlighting developments in mobile Point of Sale (mPOS), where solutions which have become common among SMEs are now making their presence felt in the retail sector. “It’s been possible for a little while now for artisans, such as plumbers and electricians working in people’s homes, to process payments on the move, rather than use cash or cheques.

Retail has lagged behind to an extent but there is a trend to have customers pay where they are, rather than have them move to a till. Our SDK toolkit allows solution developers to add EMV-certified mPOS card acceptance within an iOS or Android business app, increasing user convenience and opening access to ongoing revenue streams from referral payments,” says Anust.
%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.creditcall.com visit: www.creditcall.com false http://www.creditcall.com/ false false%>

Related Content

  • November 5, 2014
    Q&A Oberthur
    Didier Lamouche, president and CEO of Oberthur Technologies (OT), explains what ‘users on the move’ means to his company and what can be done about hackers
  • November 19, 2013
    NFC shipments will boom to 400m in 2014, says Eurosmart
    Following expected shipments of more than 250 million units in 2013, Eurosmart forecasts that more than 400 million NFC secure elements to be shipped in 2014 (see p9). NFC secure elements include NFC enabled UICCs and embedded secure elements and other form factors of NFC enabled secure elements. Eurosmart believes the NFC ecosystem is maturing: currently mobiles with NFC are available from almost all global handset manufacturers and deployment of contactless POS (point-of-sale) terminals is ongoing. In add
  • November 20, 2013
    CARTES 2013 CITC-EuraRFID video story correction
    The video item about innovative Smart Shopping Solutions in day two of the Daily Video at CARTES 2013 interviewed two people: Romain Tribout, R&D Project Manager at CITC-EuraRFID and Romain Toulotte of Natural Security. Unfortunately their names were transposed. The first interviewee speaking about the smart fitting room was Romain Tribout, CITC-EuraRFID’s R&D Proeject Manager; and the second, speaking about biometric payment, was Romain Toulotte, Product Manager at Natural Security. We apologise for the
  • November 4, 2014
    Q&A: PAX Technology
    Jack Lu, CEO of PAX Global, and Gilberto Novaes, regional sales director, offer some thoughts on new markets and the challenges of integrating online and offline payment solutions