Cardless Banking: Get Cash from the ATM Using Your Phone

A lot of things can go wrong while you’re withdrawing cash from an ATM machine. For one, you could press a wrong key while you’re entering your PIN, which means you have to start over. And while many machines have changed their card readers, your card could get stuck in some machines, which means you’ll have to call a hotline so you can get your card back. It’s also easy for thieves to skim and steal your magnetic stripe. And the list goes on.

Eliminating all these is the Cardless Cash Access (CCS) app that people with accounts at Wintrust (IL), BMO (Chicago), or City National (Los Angeles) can take advantage of.

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Using technology developed by FIS, CCS eliminated the need to have your card with you while you get your cash. It also cuts down the withdrawal process from 30 to 40 seconds to about nine seconds. Now that’s fast cash.

Here’s how it works: clients can put in a request for a withdrawal up to 24 hours before they go and pick up the cash. A QR code is then generated by the app, which should then be scanned at the ATM machine before the cash is released. You’ll need a good Internet connection to access your code when you make the withdrawal though, so that’s one drawback if your carrier doesn’t have the best 3G or 4G service.

[via CNN via Dvice]

NSA Spies on International Financial Networks


The NSA is guilty of another crime and that is spying on anyone via the VISA or SWIFT networks. In a way it was expected that a surveillance agency would go that far in its activities. This is the...

Wells Fargo offering text message receipts at its ATMs starting today

Wells Fargo offering text message receipts at its ATMs from today

Forward-thinking financial institution Wells Fargo is offering its customers the choice of receiving a text message receipt -- in addition to its e-receipt and email options -- whenever you use one of the bank's ATMs. All that's required to take part in the environmentally friendly scheme is to attach your cellphone number to your account, either online, over the phone or at your local branch. The service is available starting today, and if you'd like to learn more, we've tucked the official release below the fold.

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Cyberthieves yank $45 million in sophisticated ATM hack, make Ocean’s Eleven look trivial

Cyberthieves yank $45 million in sophisticated ATM hack, makes Ocean's 11 look trivial

It has the makings of a film -- but the fallout from one of the world's most sophisticated ATM heists is very real. The New York Times is reporting that a massive team of criminals worked in concert in order to grab some $45 million in a matter of hours over the course of two operations. The sheer scope of the project is hard to wrap one's mind around, involving trained personnel positioned in over two dozen countries.

Earlier today, federal prosecutors in Brooklyn "unsealed an indictment charging eight members of the New York crew, offering a glimpse into what the authorities said was one of the most sophisticated and effective cybercrime attacks ever uncovered." In essence, the hackers were able to infiltrate various credit card processing companies and raise withdrawal limits on prepaid accounts -- from there, cashing crews hit thousands of ATMs, socking away millions in the process. Hit up the source link for the full read; it's a wild one, for sure.

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Source: The New York Times

Bank of America Adding Live Video Chat to ATMs Soon

ATMs and I don’t have the best of relationships. I once had my card eaten by the machine and I had to wait the whole night before their technician came to help me out. I’ve also been cheated out of a couple of bills and touched a wad of chewed-up gum someone stuck at the bottom of the money slot. Not that the last one is the machine’s fault, but, well, it happened because I was using it, anyway.

I’m sure a lot of people could use more timely assistance when they run into trouble with an ATM. The good news is the banks have heard our pleas – at least, one has, anyway – and they plan on rolling out live video chat to their ATMs soon.

Live ATM ChatThe Bank of America has announced that a new ATM feature called “Teller Assist.” This will allow users to contact and direct their queries to a live remote teller via video chat. Katy Knox, who is the head of Bank of America’s retail banking division, explained: “This technology gives customers easy, convenient access to ATM banking services with the added option of having a personal interaction and the support of a teller available at the push of a button.”

The new service will initially be launched in Boston, Massachusetts. The good news is that Bank of America plans to roll out the service to the most of its 16,300 ATMs throughout the year.

[via LA Times via Dvice]

Bank of America Adds Video Chat to its ATMs

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In a controversial move, the Bank of America has elected to incorporate video chat into their ATMs, which they say will help confused customers.

Most people understand video chat to be a nifty and very useful gadget that belongs in one of three locations. It either belongs in the home and can ...
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Bank of America brings live teller video chat to ATMs

Bank of America brings live teller chat to ATMs

If you're having trouble splitting those ATM deposits into both your savings and offshore accounts, Bank of America is there to help -- literally. Its new ATMs with Teller Assist add real-time video chat, letting you speak directly to an agent for more complex transactions. Starting this month in Boston, you'll be able to cash a check for the exact amount (including change) and select precise bill denominations for withdrawals, with functions like deposit splitting, cash back with deposit and credit card / loan payments rolling out later. The Teller Assist ATMs will run from 7 AM to 10 PM and hit locations across the rest of the US "throughout 2013." Beleaguered shift workers (or white collar criminals) can see more in the PR after the break.

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Via: Fast Company

Beverly Hills ATM Serves Caviar

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Whenever you’re hungry, you can always come to your friendly neighborhood vending machine and get a quick snack or a cool drink. But if you’re in the high-end neighborhood of Beverly Hills, this special caviar vending machine will not only satisfy your hunger, but will also fulfill your expensive cravings.
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Security researchers find new wafer-thin ATM card skimmers in use

Security researchers find new waferthin ATM card skimmers in use

ATM card skimming is hardly a new activity, and neither are card skimmers that continue to get smaller and more discreet. As Brian Krebs of the Krebs on Security blog reports, though, a new development out of Europe has now crossed a key, and potentially troublesome threshold. The European ATM Security Team (otherwise known as EAST) has discovered a new type of wafer-thin card skimmer in use in at least one unnamed European country that's small enough to fit directly in the ATM's card slot -- that's as opposed to most current skimmers that can be well-disguised but generally sit on top of the card slot. As you can imagine, that makes it considerably more difficult to spot for even the most attentive ATM users, but Krebs notes that the skimmer still requires a secondary device like a camera or keypad overlay to record a person entering their PIN.

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Security researchers find new wafer-thin ATM card skimmers in use originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Jul 2012 21:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Japanese biometric ATM reads your palm, tells fortune

Japanese biometric ATM reads your palm, tells fortune
A palm reading cash machine might not tell you your fortune, but it will, at least, dispense some of it. Ogaki Kyoritsu Bank in Japan has revealed that it will introduce the nation's first ATM that lets you withdraw money just by scanning your palm. This isn't the first ATM to use extra human verification, but it claims it's the first that functions without the need for your cash card. Customers will need to pop in to a branch to provide some manual verification -- and of course a palm scan -- then you're away. The bank hopes this will help people access their cash in the event of losing your card, or a natural disaster. Great until you upgrade to one of these.

Japanese biometric ATM reads your palm, tells fortune originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Apr 2012 12:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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