Computer
Scientists Develop a 'Smart' Payment Card That Can Easily
Be Programmed to Restrict Spending
September
23, 2003
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have one-upped
"smart" credit cards with embedded microchips. They've developed
a technique that lets ordinary card users program in their
own spending parameters.
Penn computer scientist Carl
A. Gunter presented the work at the recent European Conference
on Object-Oriented Programming in Darmstadt, Germany. The
technology could let employers better manage spending on corporate
cards or permit parents to get teenage children emergency
credit cards usable only at locations like car repair shops,
hotels or pay phones.
"Banks and other card issuers have long been able to set
general parameters, such as credit limits," said Gunter, professor
of Computer and Information
Science at Penn, "but most have little interest in setting
finer limits because the process is cumbersome and expensive
to manage. We'd like to open up these kinds of additional
programming capabilities to ordinary people who'd like to
take responsibility for restricting use of a card in some
specific way. Users would decide what limits are needed."
Programmable credit cards could let cardholders limit expenditures,
for instance, to $100 a day or to spending only on certain
days or at certain establishments, Gunter said. The programmable
card's added layer of security could also help cut fraudulent
online use of credit cards, which has grown into a significant
problem for consumers and industry. The same technology could
be used in cell phones that use a smart card, Gunter said,
to provide owners with ways to regulate the use of the phone
by others.
The programmable card developed by Gunter and his colleagues
unites an array of existing technologies, including the microchips
first built into credit cards more than 30 years ago. An on-card
verification system prevents unauthorized users from tampering
with limits programmed in by the card's rightful owner. A
commercial card-reader already on the market plugs into a
computer dock, letting users link card and computer to create
personalized restrictions using interfaces created by Gunter's
group.
Gunter's work with programmable credit cards is the latest
development in the movement toward open application programming
interfaces, which allow users to tinker with the miniature
computers embedded in devices from cars to cell phones to
personal digital assistants. For example, many cell phones
now have open APIs that let users import different ring tones.
"Open APIs are generally a plus for consumers," Gunter said,
"because they build in flexibility and allow for a richer
array of uses."
Gunter is joined in this research, funded by the National
Science Foundation and Army Research Office, by Rajeev
Alur, Penn professor of computer and information science,
and Alwyn Goodloe, Michael McDougall, Jason Simas and Watee
Arjsamat, all of whom are Penn students or staff.
Penn is seeking corporate partners and investors to commercialize
this technology. Additional information is available by contacting
Jennifer Choy in Penn's Center for Technology Transfer at
215-898-9273.
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