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  2. Billing descriptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billing_descriptor

    A billing descriptor refers to how a company's name appears on a credit card statement and is established when the merchant account is created. It is intended for credit card customers to identify the recipient of a payment for a specific transaction.

  3. Green Dot Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Dot_Corporation

    Green Dot Corporation also issues a secured payment card, the Platinum Visa Secured card. This is a Visa card that is secured by a deposit, and is not a debit card nor is it a prepaid card. It is a credit card.

  4. Questions about checking and bill surcharges - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/questions-about-checking...

    If you want to avoid paying this fee, you can learn how to change your payment method or go directly to My Account and choose a different payment option. Note: Debit and check cards count as credit cards! To avoid the surcharge, change your payment method to the Visa, MasterCard or Discover associated with your checking account.

  5. Contactless smart card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contactless_smart_card

    In a retail shop, however, it is advisable to remove the individual contactless card from the wallet when making a payment. At the very least this gives the cardholder the opportunity to communicate which card they intend to be used to make payment. It is an issue of the card identifying a subscription -v- payment by transaction.

  6. Credit score - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_score

    In Australia, credit scoring is widely accepted as the primary method of assessing creditworthiness. Credit scoring is used not only to determine whether credit should be approved to an applicant, but for credit scoring in the setting of credit limits on credit or store cards, in behavioral modelling such as collections scoring, and also in the pre-approval of additional credit to a company's ...

  7. Curve (payment card) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curve_(payment_card)

    Curve (also known as the Curve card) is a payment card that aggregates multiple payment cards through its accompanying mobile app, allowing a user to make payments and withdrawals from a single card. It lets you "switch the bank card you paid with after each transaction is complete."

  8. Card security code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Card_security_code

    The card security code is not encoded on the magnetic stripe but is printed flat. American Express cards have a four-digit code printed on the front side of the card above the number. Diners Club, Discover, JCB, Mastercard, and Visa credit and debit cards have a three-digit card security code. The code is the final group of numbers printed on ...

  9. Credit card debt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_card_debt

    Credit use, the number of on-time payments and the length of time one has had one's credit card can effect the credit score of the credit-card debtor. [ 16 ] The overall score of a debtor varies between scoring agencies and services that report to the bureaus.