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by lxgr 812 days ago
> EMV Contactless definitely signs the whole transaction, with Apple Pay on the web in at least some cases it will use either a dynamic CVV code and/or "cryptogram" containing the transaction data similar to the contactless protocol that verifies that specific payment request was signed by the secure device/card.

The same is true for chip card payments.

What makes Apple Pay significantly more secure in practice is that issuers can limit the device-specific card number to be only usable with a chip cryptogram, and not e.g. by manually typing it in on a website.

For POS and online payments, the idea was the same (eventually depreciate cryptogram-less use entirely and use 3DS online and chip/EMV at the POS), but alas, it never quite happened that way.

> On the merchant/processor side, I believe in some cases you may get a better rate or different fraud protection for such transactions (especially at a large scale)

Apple Pay usually shifts the liability for fraud to the issuer, yes. This is a huge advantage for merchants that would otherwise usually be on the hook for most types of fraud.

4 comments

> What makes Apple Pay significantly more secure in practice is that issuers can limit the device-specific card number to be only usable with a chip cryptogram, and not e.g. by manually typing it in on a website.

That's sort of true for non 3DS enabled cards. For 3DS enabled cards, you need a second factor for most transactions on the internet.

For 3DS enabled cards, 3DS is optional. Unless you mean 3DS-mandatory cards.
> For POS and online payments, the idea was the same (eventually depreciate cryptogram-less use entirely and use 3DS online and chip/EMV at the POS), but alas, it never quite happened that way.

where I live it happened exactly this way since a few years. Online is 3DS only and in person is chip/EMV only

Can you not use your card in US online stores? These mostly don’t support 3DS, so there is still a large fraud vector for compromised cards that work internationally.
I'm not sure, because I haven't been to the US in more than ten years. Last year in Canada everything worked flawlessly
Apple Pay is also somewhat different from contactless/chip payments on a card because it's authenticated, whereas (US at least) cards are not authenticated since we don't use PINs.

IIRC in some countries this means it's accepted more or has higher payment limits.

Do the chip / paywave payments with the physical card also use a DPAN generated for that card, or do they use the FPAN that's embossed on the plastic?
A physical card usually uses the number embossed on the plastic on all other channels (i.e. magnetic stripe, chip, contactless) as well.

That's not a hard rule – some cards have no number embossed/printed at all (e.g. the Apple Card), and it's technically possible to use different numbers. But I haven't really seen it done since it could cause quite some confusion, as e.g. some airlines use the card number to look up your online booking at self-check-in machines, which wouldn't work if the two differ.

There are also some special cases of things that are technically regular old smartcards but that do (I believe) use tokenization/DPANs, like wearable form factor contactless payment devices by Swatch or Fidesmo.

Ahh, that makes sense - in fact I just used a credit card to pick up linked online Shinkansen bookings from the JR-West ticket machines.

(Those systems all seem to use either magstripe or chip though, so maybe the wireless transaction could still use a different one, in theory).