630
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2024
630 points (98.6% liked)
Technology
60130 readers
2751 users here now
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each another!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
Approved Bots
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
This would suck so bad. My debit card's chip went bad and the bank can't reissue me a new one until it expires. I've been using cash as a fallback when I don't want to do the '3 chip failure timeout then swipe' dance just to purchase some soda.
Report it lost instead. I've lost cards loads of times over the years. One phone call and the new one is on its way. However the fact your bank wouldn't issue your replacement makes me think they would charge you for this privilege.
And many banks can reprint one at the branch, all free of charge. It's incredibly cheap for them to do so, and they profit from each transaction, so there's little reason for them to refuse unless you do it a lot.
I've had a number of cards replaced, it's really not an issue.
They seriously won't issue one even though it's faulty? Surely it's their fault as suppliers of a defective product that is probably still owned by them in some legalise way!
My chip stopped working and after one quick phone call they sent a replacement one. Do all the banks you can access do this or worth changing over?
That doesn't seem right at all, no matter the country. And do you not have tap payments?
Wireless (tap) payments are vulnerable to wireless relay attacks.
Correct. The card is not tap. The only cards they can order now are tap, so to get a replacement they have to cancel the card and issue a brand new one, messing up any autopay tied to the current number and leaving me without a payment method while the new one arrives.
Really? In the US at least, most autopay systems continue working when a new card is issued, even if there are completely new numbers. I've done this several times and never had a hiccup.
That's not the case if it's a new account entirely, but if the numbers merely change, you shouldn't need to do anything, because the bank just lets the other company know the new details when an autopay comes in with the old details (I think it's automated as well).
This actually pisses me off a bit, because it means I have to actually go cancel things instead of just letting them die when the card changes.
Yeah, I can't explain the limitation either. That's how all my cards worked before when they changed numbers after expiration, but the branch manager was very clear that the current debit card would be canceled not reissued. So it's a new account under my name with the tap card. They even showed me the software used to order replacements, and my card type was cleared marked DO NOT USE.
Is it a new account? Or is it just a new debit card number that references the same checking account?
With credit cards it's a bit more obvious what's going on because there's a clear difference between closing an account (requires another credit check), cancelling a card (changes number, but doesn't change underlying account), and reissuing a card (same number, just replaces the physical card). I've done all three with debit cards, and at least here, cancelling a card just means those numbers are no longer valid and you'll get new numbers, but the account is in-tact (and you retain the same account number) and autopay is redirected to the new number automatically.
I haven't had a debit card replacement impact the account except one time, when the checking account number was embedded in the debit card number (small bank, never again), and that was like 15 years ago.
same checking number, new account. The branch manager was 100% sure that any autopay using the current card would not be automatically updated because the new card would not be considered a successor to my current card.
She even showed me the scenario play out in the card ordering software.
Weird, maybe debit works differently than credit? I haven't used a debit card for autopay for several years.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
All I know is that if my country was entirely digital in payments, I'd be between a rock and a hard place.
In the future I’d recommend adding your card to your phone. It’s more secure paying with your phone vs card, and if you need a new card for whatever reason, your phone will automatically just keep working.
I would be changing banks. That's super unreasonable
Exactly. In the US, I can ask for a new card pretty much whenever I want, though they may charge a fee if I do it too often. If they were being really difficult, I'd just tell them I lost it and they'd provide a new one, because they want me to use the card (they make money with each purchase).
You mean they won't. Change banks or threaten to do so, might work.