Tokenization is a technology that enables a token to replace a credit card number in an electronic transaction. This token or reference number is meant to prevent the theft of the credit card number during electronic transmission and storage of a transaction. Since the reference number can't be used for transactions or fraudulent charges, there is little harm done if it's stolen.
The purpose of tokenization is to meet the Payment Card Industry (PCI) Data Security standard, which mandates that credit card data can't be stored on the retailer's point of sale (POS) device or it's databases after a transaction. This is one of the 12 points in the PCI DSS, which must be met by companies processing credit cards, including banks, retailers and merchants.
Many merchants have complained that in order to be PCI compliant, they will have to make expensive upgrades or replacements to their POS systems.
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Michael S. Mimoso, Editorial DirectorTokenization was invented by Shift4 Corp., which developed a driver for POS software to generate and accept tokens. The only thing merchants have to do is install the driver on their POS equipment. The driver is substantially cheaper than replacing or upgrading POS hardware to encrypt card numbers, which would otherwise be required for PCI compliance.
Is tokenization effective? For the time being, it probably is. Of course, eventually some clever hacker will probably find a way to beat the system. But right now it offers both PCI compliance and some level of network security -- the best of both worlds for merchants using credit cards.
This was first published in July 2007