WASHINGTON - (06/01/06) -- CUNA said Wednesday is working withlawmakers to have enacted into a law a key data security provisionthat would require all retailers and other users of credit cardtransactions to destroy account numbers and other personalinformation immediately after use. The provision, supported bycredit union insurer CUNA Mutual Group, would require retailers todestroy the personal data after they receive confirmation of atransaction, according to CUNA lobbyist Dean Sagar, who isdiscussing the provision with congressional members in an effort toget it included in pending data security legislation. Therequirement is currently part of the Payment Card Industry standardenacted by MasterCard and Visa, the two biggest players in thepayments industry. But it has been found to be widely ignored byretailers. CUNA Mutual has focused on the requirement as one of themost effective ways to prevent the theft of credit card data bythird parties. "This is one of the few pre-emptive things thatanybody is talking about," Sagar told The Credit Union Journal."There's no reason for any of that information to be retained afterthe transaction is complete."
-
Federal prosecutors have sought records and account closure data from banks as the Trump administration continues to clash with the industry.
46m ago -
The super-regional bank is increasingly building AI on its own. The point, CEO Bill Demchak said this week, is not just to foster innovation but to protect the bank from rising costs.
56m ago -
The blockchain fintech acquired the real estate lender through a joint venture to tokenize housing loans and test its new AI-powered onboarding agent.
58m ago -
With the big card networks and Coinbase pushing the new form of artificial intelligence, the blockchain company is offering a tool kit to enable AI agents to perform transactions.
2h ago -
A federal judge let fraud claims against Meta proceed, finding its AI ad tools may have helped build ads that impersonated a Bank of America executive.
2h ago -
Oklahoma City-based BancFirst agreed to pay an undisclosed sum for SpiritBank. The deal comes just seven months after the buyer completed another in-state acquisition.
3h ago











