Table of Contents
Introduction
Credit card scraping is a type of card manipulation. Fraudsters can steal your credit card information, including card number, CVV code or PIN, using a scraper, a small pinhole camera or a fake keyboard.
Bank transfers are usually accompanied by concern, whether online or atm, due to the depreciation of their balances after withdrawal. At the same time, the majority worry about the risk of losing their essential personal information and thus losing the money they have painstakingly earned.
Online bank transactions require OTP (one-time password), as well as a card pin code, but this is not the case in bank transactions conducted through ATMs, as anyone using your card number and pin code can withdraw money from your account, which may cause a significant decrease in your bank balance from what it was.
But how can a stranger have your credit card information? There are several ways, but the most common is credit card scraping.
Credit card scraping is a form of fraud. Someone is stealing your personal credit cards information, such as your card number, card holder’s name, and a pin code, using a scraper, then illegally extracting money from the account or selling your card information.
Credit Card Scraping Mechanism
On the other hand, your credit card has a black bar called magstripe, which stores all the information the fraudster needs to steal your money: the cardholder’s name, expiration date, and CVV code.
Magstripe remains made of tiny magnetic particles made of iron, fragmented into two or three separate paths, which can magnetize each molecule in a different direction, depending on the information it encrypts.
The essence of the scraping process is abrasive, a scanner mounted on the card scanner at the atm.
All ATMs in the city share a unified design, and the black market remains filled with counterfeit scrapers similar to those used in ATMs.
Counterfeit scrapers remain professionally designed, as most customers don’t realize their existence. Every time someone enters their card at an atm, they pass it without knowing through the scraper.
The abrasives can read the magstripe on your credit card and store the information coded in it, as some of the scrapers can store data from hundreds of cards.
The information must be extracted from basic abrasions manually. Which means an increased risk of fraud. Still, some modern scrapes have remote accessibility and the ability to transmit data wirelessly.
Credit card scraping – a type of card manipulation – stole your credit card information, including card number, cvv code or pin
How To Avoid Abrasion?
Fortunately, it is possible to see if he tampered with the atm or remained provided with a fake scraper: Before entering your scan card. You should shake the device lightly:
Legally licensed scanners are durable and tightly installed in the machine. So they will not be affected by the slight tremor. Still, the abrasions can separate under the influence of vibration. If the card slot appears to remain broken. You should avoid using this cashier to prevent the risk of abrasion.
Look for any cameras hidden around the machine before entering the pin code.
The most common places where someone might install a camera are at the top of the keyboard. At the top of the atm, or perhaps next to the screen.
Do not use this machine if the keys seem to be moving or shaking. The most vulnerable ATMs are those at gas stations located in areas isolated from congestion and not controlled.
Avoid using such ATMs except when necessary. Instead, try to save a few minutes in paying your account using the machine on the cashier’s desk instead of using the card, for the less likely possibility that it remains equipped with a scraper.
One Last Word.
Banking companies have begun to take further measures to reduce scraping, replacing older and simpler card slots with more detailed and complex designs. Making it more challenging to provide them with fake scrapers. And ensuring security and protection bars and tags to determine whether a person tries to tamper with the exchange.
Most cards are also provided with EMV chips (a small square computer chip placed at the front of your card) that are more capable of detecting scrape manipulation than magstripes. In addition, the data stored in EMV varies for each bank transaction. Making the card more protected against fraud.
However, with every additional level of protection that banks put in place, fraudsters always find new ways to hack, so be sure to keep your pin every time you use your card, be careful and be careful not to regret it!