To protect the interest of the debit and credit card users for online transactions against fraud, cyber theft and other malpractices, RBI has recently tightened the norms of tokenization which is likely to take effect from January 1 2022. According to the recent circular, no entity in the card transaction or payment chain (other than card issuers or card networks) shall store the actual card (debit or credit or other cards) data. Any such data stored previously shall be purged. Also, for transaction tracking purposes, entities can store limited data such as the last four digits of the actual card number and card issuer’s name.
But what is card tokenisation? And how does it impact individual users? Read on to find out more!
Whenever you make a payment or transact online, you, as a credit or debit card user, would have to enter your sixteen-digit card number, expiration details and CVV, followed by OTP confirmation. In some cases, these card details are already stored, and in some cases, you would have to enter the details manually. While the transactions are secure, they are still open to cyber threats. This is where tokenisation comes into play.
Tokenisation refers to the replacement of actual card details with an alternate code known as ‘token’. It is a unique code with random numbers that are not expected to be stolen or reused. So even if there is a data breach, the customer’s account details are generally considered secure, and the tokens are useless to cybercriminals.
Card-on-File transactions will also be tokenised. CoF transactions are those transactions where the cardholder has already authorised a merchant to store details.