Carried over from CS:
It is a well-established fact that many stores, as policy, require their staff to ask for ID from customers who present a credit card or credit card-branded debit card for payment.
It is also well-established that Visa and MasterCard explicitly prohibit refusing a sale if a customer refuses to present ID, assuming the card is signed. The accepted practice by their standards is to check signatures.
That leads to an impasse when a customer who believes the latter encounters a cashier who is obligated to enforce the former.
I've found that nearly all merchants in my area either don't bother checking, or check signatures. One merchant asked for ID. Contrast this to Virginia, where I spent a year and a half; any merchant that checked anything preferred to check ID instead.
I wondered for a long time why so many of these companies are willing to stick their necks out by making a policy that directly contradicts their merchant agreement.
My opinion is this: there are three types of merchants.
1. The merchants that don't bother checking at all. I'm guessing that most merchants fall in this category, particularly supermarkets and convenience stores.
2. The merchants that check signatures. This varies from region to region.
3. The merchants that check ID. This also varies, but more regions have more merchants that fall into this category.
Also consider that many people choose not to sign their cards (or "sign" them with "See ID" or similar), technically rendering them invalid. Options 1 and 3 are easier for merchants to deal with customers. Option 2 causes more trouble with customers, because there's the matter of not only asking for ID, but telling the customer they need to sign the card, which usually never ends well. I know this not only from reading posts on CS, but my and my gf's own experience.
Some people think that it's easier to forge signatures than to forge ID. That depends on the signature...maybe mine is easier to forge than, say, my father's (mine is a chicken-scratch type of signature, whereas my father's is more artistic). Visa's Merchant Rules has this to say:
I still wonder why it's considered safer to check ID instead of signatures. If nothing else, it seems like less hassle for the merchant. I don't knock anyone who wants their ID checked; that's their right to request it. It's just not necessary, according to the credit card companies.
It is a well-established fact that many stores, as policy, require their staff to ask for ID from customers who present a credit card or credit card-branded debit card for payment.
It is also well-established that Visa and MasterCard explicitly prohibit refusing a sale if a customer refuses to present ID, assuming the card is signed. The accepted practice by their standards is to check signatures.
That leads to an impasse when a customer who believes the latter encounters a cashier who is obligated to enforce the former.
I've found that nearly all merchants in my area either don't bother checking, or check signatures. One merchant asked for ID. Contrast this to Virginia, where I spent a year and a half; any merchant that checked anything preferred to check ID instead.
I wondered for a long time why so many of these companies are willing to stick their necks out by making a policy that directly contradicts their merchant agreement.
My opinion is this: there are three types of merchants.
1. The merchants that don't bother checking at all. I'm guessing that most merchants fall in this category, particularly supermarkets and convenience stores.
2. The merchants that check signatures. This varies from region to region.
3. The merchants that check ID. This also varies, but more regions have more merchants that fall into this category.
Also consider that many people choose not to sign their cards (or "sign" them with "See ID" or similar), technically rendering them invalid. Options 1 and 3 are easier for merchants to deal with customers. Option 2 causes more trouble with customers, because there's the matter of not only asking for ID, but telling the customer they need to sign the card, which usually never ends well. I know this not only from reading posts on CS, but my and my gf's own experience.
Some people think that it's easier to forge signatures than to forge ID. That depends on the signature...maybe mine is easier to forge than, say, my father's (mine is a chicken-scratch type of signature, whereas my father's is more artistic). Visa's Merchant Rules has this to say:
In reality, criminals don't take the time to practice signatures: they use cards as quickly as possible after a theft and prior to the accounts being blocked. They are actually counting on you not to look at the back of the card and compare signatures—they may even have access to counterfeit identification with a signature in their own handwriting.
Comment