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The fight over the interchange amendment heated up on Wednesday when Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., sent JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon an open letter defending the provision.
April 14 -
Momentum for the EMV smart card security standard, common in many European countries, grew this week with JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. announcing plans to start issuing EMV cards to U.S. customers this summer.
April 14 -
For the major card brands, emerging global markets that broadly lack access to financial services likely will represent the greatest earnings potential for mobile-payments initiatives, concludes a report from Macquarie Equities Research Group.
April 14 -
Responding to consumers’ growing concerns about online fraud and identity theft, American Express Co. on April 13 unveiled a premium-level fraud-monitoring service that enables cardholders to opt in to receive beefed-up fraud protection.
April 14 -
Responding to consumers’ growing concerns about online fraud and identity theft, American Express Co. on April 13 unveiled a premium-level fraud-monitoring service that enables cardholders to opt in to receive beefed-up fraud protection.
April 14 -
A Malaysian national, arrested in October hours after flying into Kennedy International Airport, pleaded guilty in New York April 13 to hacking into the Federal Reserve’s computer system and to illegally possessing hundreds of thousands of card account numbers and other account information.
April 14 -
A Woodlands, Texas-based independent sales organization has added a processing platform and is growing into a super ISO with fewer but higher-producing partners, company executives say.
April 14 -
The Chinese Ministry of Commerce on April 12 published guidelines for online third-party payment providers in an attempt to regulate the fast-developing business-to-consumer e-commerce market.
April 14 -
WASHINGTON – Sen. Jon Tester opened debate on delaying the controversial interchange rule this morning insisting the proposed cuts in debit fees will cause unintended harm to rural banks and credit unions, even as the Senator and his allies desperately search for a bill to attach their delay measure to.
April 14 -
WASHINGTON – Sen. Jon Tester opened debate on delaying the controversial interchange rule this morning insisting the proposed cuts in debit fees will cause unintended harm to rural banks and credit unions, even as the Senator and his allies desperately search for a bill to attach their delay measure to.
April 14