Glossary
acceptance The act of receiving
a bankcard as a form of payment.
account-based In fare collection,
a system that maintains an account in a central computer, rather
than storing value on the card. Compare stored-value.
acquirer Also merchant acquirer,
acquires and settles credit/debit transactions between the merchant
and the issuing bank.
antenna The part of a terminal that communicates with smart cards.
array A group of gates.
authorization The process of
validating a transaction before submitting it for settlement.
acquiring In the credit card
system, submitting transactions to an issuer for settlement.
AFC automated fare collection.
APTA American Public Transportation
Association.
bank, issuer These two terms
are used interchangeably for card issuers.
bankcard A credit, debit, and sometimes a prepaid card issued by a bank or other card issuer for use in commerce.
banked Said of a rider who has
a bank account, as opposed to unbanked, those without
a bank account.
chargeback The process of reversing
a credit card transaction.
DOT Department of
Transportation, a Federal agency.
e-purse An account-based card
system where the user must put funds into the account before using
the card.
EMV The standard devised by Europay,
Mastercard and Visa (EMVco ) for
contact smart credit and debit cards, to replace existing magnetic
stripe cards with a more secure format.
farebox Bus cash register or
automated device that collects bus fares.
gate Subway or train entry/exit
point that accepts fares.
integrator A company that provides
transit systems, including design, procurement and installation.
ISO Independent Sales Organization.
Not to be confused with the International Organization for Standardization,
an ISO in the credit-card system is a sales company that gets customers
for acquirers and manages customer service for them.
ISO 14443 A standard for smart cards in the credit-card format. This
standard was developed by the International
Standards Organization, a network of national standards institutes from 148 countries working
in partnership with international organizations, governments, industry,
business and consumer representatives. The ISO is the source of ISO
9000, ISO 14000 and more than 14,000 International Standards for
business, government and society.
issuer A bank or non-bank credit
card issuer.
lost transaction A transaction
lost by a card-processing system due to being torn or for other reasons.
merchant A store that sells a
service or product. In credit-card processing, the creator of transactions.
MSP Merchant Service Provider.
A type of ISO, particularly one which manages customer service for
the acquirer.
negative list An anti-fraud method also called hotlist or blacklist. A list
of bad card numbers.
POS point of sale [device],
the gizmo where a credit or debit card is swiped or tapped to submit
a transaction to the financial system.
positive list An anti-fraud method. A list
of known good card numbers.
RFID Radio frequency ID, a tiny
chip used to tag cartons, animals or other items for ready identification
at a distance. Although the term generically
includes smart cards, it is not to be confused with a smart card.
An RFID tag carries only a small number of bytes of data and has no processor.
RFP Request for proposal, a bidding
method used by public agencies.
reduced fare The conditions of
use for classes of riders such as children, students, seniors and
disabled.
RFP Request for Proposals. In
a public bidding process, the document requesting proposals from
contractors for a certain work.
settlement The process of settling
funds generated from a transaction.
smart card Also chip card,
or integrated circuit card, any pocket-sized card with embedded
integrated circuits. There are two broad categories of smart cards.
Memory cards contain only memory storage components,
and perhaps some specific security logic. Microprocessor cards contain
memory plus microprocessor components. The standard perception of
a "smart card" is
a microprocessor card of credit card dimensions (or smaller, e.g. a SIM
card) with various tamper-resistant properties and capable of providing security
services. Not all chip cards
contain a microprocessor (e.g. memory cards), and therefore not all chip cards
are necessarily also smart cards. However, the public usage of the term
is often inconsistent.
spoof 1) To deceive for the
purpose of gaining access to someone else's resources (for example,
to fake an Internet address so that one looks like a certain kind
of Internet user or server). 2) To simulate a communications protocol.
stored value Monetary value
that is stored on a card, and systems that handle these cards. Stored value is equivalent to cash. Customers purchase
value on the card ahead of its use. Compare account-based.
submission In a settlement, the
act of submitting a the transaction to the acquirer and to the issuer
for fund settlement.
tap Bringing a smart card to within 4 inches of the reader in order
to effect a transaction. Depending on the settings of the reader,
no actual tapping may be necessary; the card may be read through
clothing or a purse.
terminal A device that reads information from and writes to cards connected to a computer that communicates with the central fare processor.
time pass Or time-based pass. A pass sold for unlimited rides on a system
within a period of time.
torn Said of transactions incompletely
written to the card at the gate or farebox. Usually caused by the
customer moving his or her hand too quickly for the gate to finish
writing to the card, a torn transaction can create a lost
transaction and/or make the card inoperable.
t-purse An e-purse for transit
fares.
trip pass A fare that pays for
one ride.
unbanked Said of those without
a bank account.
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