Oct
10
Some international debit cards are non-PIN protected and can be used even by just the holder’s signature. Since any signature is prone to forgery, these PIN-free international debit cards are very risky and anyone who gets a hold of your card and thereafter learns to forge your signature will be able to easily clean up your bank account. The solution to this risk is quite simple; only get international debit cards that are PIN protected.
International debit cards are indeed far riskier than credit cards. And the federal government has highlighted and clarified the gravest risks. Detailed explanations of the said risks are as follows:
Legally, your ultimate liability for fraudulent use of a credit card is generally only $50. And, when a credit card is fraudulently used, you are also only disputing whether you owe the bank money. Unlike a credit card, if your international debit card is used fraudulently, the thief robs your checking account. Potentially, all your money is drained out of your checking account. It could take the bank 10 days or more to investigate and refund your money.
Worse, unlike a credit card, under the law, your international debit card liability could be as much as $500, if you notify the bank more than 48 hours after you learn of the problem or even up to all the money in your checking account plus your maximum overdraft line of credit if you fail to notify the bank within 60 days. Under pressure from the state PIRGs, banks claim to have voluntarily limited international debit card liability to $50. PIRG has received complaints from consumers whose banks have not honored the well-publicized alleged voluntary $50 limit.
On lost or stolen credit cards, your loss is limited to $50 per card. On an EFT card, your liability for an unauthorized withdrawal can vary: Your loss is limited to $50 if you notify the financial institution within two business days after learning of loss or theft of your card or code. But you could lose as much as $500 if you do not tell the card issuer within two business days after learning of loss or theft.
If you do not report an unauthorized transfer that appears on your statement within 60 days after the statement is mailed to you, you risk unlimited loss on transfers made after the 60-day period. That means you could lose all the money in your account plus your maximum overdraft line of credit, if any.
Even worse, you are fighting to recover your own money back into your own checking account. It is true that some banks may eventually honor the voluntary $50 limit, but consumers face horrific problems because while the bank is conducting its internal investigation, consumers are dealing with other checks that may bounce, and consumers face enormous hassles explaining what happened to the bounced checks they wrote to their other creditors, since the fraudster drained their account. In 2001, the chief national bank regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates all banks with national in their name, warned banks that the burden of proof in a reinvestigation is on the bank to show that a transaction was authorized.
The OCC is concerned that some banks may be rejecting claims of unauthorized transactions solely because the customer’s Automated Teller Machine card or international debit card and personal identification number were used in the transaction, and the customer supplied no information indicating that the card or PIN was misappropriated. These facts alone may be insufficient to establish that a transaction was authorized because fraudulent means may have been used to obtain the customer’s account number, card, or PIN. For instance, the customer may have been a victim of “shoulder surfing,” a practice used by criminals to obtain account or card numbers or PINs by observing customer transactions.
Get the 2-GetCash International debit card now and enjoy all the benefits available to credit card holders are a tiny fraction of the cost and with greatly reduced risks.
By: Darewin Ocampo
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