this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2024
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Cybersecurity

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Starting from 2030, Mastercard will no longer require Europeans to enter their card numbers manually when checking out online -- no matter what platform or device they're using. Mastercard will announce Tuesday in a fireside chat with CNBC that, by 2030, all cards it issues on its network in Europe will be tokenized. In other words, instead of the 16-digit card number we're all accustomed to using for transactions, this will be replaced with a randomly generated "token."

The firm says it's been working with banks, fintechs, merchants and other partners to phase out manual card entry for e-commerce by 2030 in Europe, in favor of a one-click button across all online platforms. This will ensure that consumers' cards are secure against fraud attempts, Mastercard says. Users won't have to keep entering passwords every time they try to make a payment, as Mastercard is introducing passkeys that replace passwords.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Interesting but I just memorized my card numbers. It's incredibly convenient and I recommend everyone to do it.

This might improve security though, because instead of using the same numbers everywhere you use different tokens everywhere.

It would be cool if computers could use their smart card readers (Chip and NFC) to pay stuff online.