With the goal of encouraging Web merchants and shoppers to use personal checks for e-tail sales, the Electronic Payments Association instituted new rules Friday for how electronic checks are processed.
Published:
17 March 2001 y., Saturday
"As e-commerce matures, consumers and businesses will expect to have payment choices, just as they do in the bricks-and-mortar world," said Elliott C. McEntee, president and chief executive officer of the not-for-profit association, which is also known as the National Automated Clearing House Association (NACHA).
The new rules will govern how Internet merchants accept payments by check sent through NACHA's Automated Clearing House network (ACH), the transfer system that processes approximately 32 million electronic checks a year.
The rules require Web merchants accepting electronic checks sent through the ACH network to verify all account numbers and establish a secure Internet connection with online shoppers before asking for their personal bank account information.
The revised procedures are expected to set a new industry standard for how e-commerce purchases are made using bank checking accounts.
The new rules require Internet merchants to conduct annual audits to ensure that consumer bank account information is safe throughout -- and after -- the electronic transaction. The association is also calling on Web merchants to adopt "commercially reasonable" anti-fraud measures.
McEntee said the new rules "address the unique environment of the Internet" and provide for an electronic payment system that meets the "safety and soundness requirements of the payments system."
The ACH network is the transfer system that clears most of the electronic payments sent between banks and other financial institutions in the United States. In addition to the clearinghouse network itself, the Federal Reserve, the Electronic Payments Network and Visa act as ACH Operators -- or central clearing facilities -- through which financial institutions transmit or receive ACH entries.
NACHA represents more than 12,000 financial institutions in the United States.
Šaltinis:
ecommercetimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Gemalto teaming up with two banking technology leaders to help banks in Venezuela move to a new, high-tech smart credit card that will better protect their customers from fraud and identity theft.
more »
The new Bull HPC-FF1 supercomputer with 100 Teraflops-capacity will host applications for the European Union Fusion community.
more »
Gemalto, the world leader in digital security today announced its revenue for the full year and fourth quarter of 2008.
more »
Wincor World 2009, which was held in Paderborn from January 20 to 22, has once more proven to be the place where experts from retail banking and retailers gather, even in times of economic crisis.
more »
Motorola Inc. announced it has been recognized with one of the world’s foremost industrial design honors, an iF product design award.
more »
The EU’s antiterrorism coordinator, Gilles de Kerchove, and Interpol representatives, will brief MEPs on Thursday about progress in combating terrorism.
more »
The Tesco retail chain in Poland has chosen Wincor Nixdorf to maintain its 4,600-strong estate of POS systems and servers from different vendors.
more »
Gemalto, the world leader in digital security, announces it will deliver an additional one million of its latest generation electronic ID cards for citizens and residents of the Kingdom of Bahrain.
more »
CAXA increases sales and reduces costs with Aladdin HASP SRM.
more »
Bull extends the deployment of Comptel Dynamic OSS, at the heart of the telco's information systems.
more »