The present invention relates to methods and systems for creating, issuing and printing financial transaction cards, such as credit cards issued to consumers by financial institutions.
More specifically, the present invention pertains to methods and systems that allow a bank or other financial institution to instantly and securely issue a personalized credit card to a consumer at a branch or other remote location.
Many new customer accounts opened by banks include one or more debit or credit cards associated with the account. New customer accounts are typically opened at branch locations whereas new cards are often issued by a centralized card services provider that is not physically near the bank branch. Accordingly, the customer must supply card information to a bank employee at the branch. The customer may or may not have an opportunity to select a personalized PIN at that time. This card data is then communicated, perhaps in a batch mode with other card data, to a card services provider.
The card services provider fulfills the card request by printing and encoding the card, then mailing it to the branch or to the customer. The customer must then activate the card. This process involves delay and expense that is undesirable and may introduce unnecessary security risks.
What is needed, then, is a low cost, secure, simple and easy to install system and method for providing instant issue of personalized financial transaction cards in a bank branch. This needed system and method should interface with the new accounts platform/host used by the bank and meet all of the security requirements imposed by the major credit and debit card issuers and transaction processors.
In one embodiment, the present invention is a method for issuing a personalized financial transaction card from a financial institution to a customer in response to a customer request made from a branch location associated with the financial institution. A bank employee or operator receives customer information and card information from the customer at the branch location. The card information may include a card personal identification number (PIN). The operator inputs the customer information and at least some the card information into a data processing terminal at the branch.
The customer information and the card information are communicated from the branch across a network to a card services provider. At the card services provider, the PIN is entered into a PIN database, a reference number associated with the customer is generated, and a PIN offset is generated. The reference number and at least some of the customer data and card data may be stored in a card file associated with the customer. The reference number is used to retrieve the PIN from the PIN database. The retrieved PIN is then used to apply calculations to the card file.
The card file is securely sent from the card services provider across the network to the branch location. Using information from the card file, the financial transaction card is printed for the customer at the branch location. In a preferred embodiment, the personalized card is instantly issued while the customer is present at the branch location.
In another embodiment, a verification message may be sent to the financial institution and to a card transaction processor when the financial transaction card has been successfully printed. Also, an error message may be sent to the branch location and to a card transaction processor when the financial transaction card does not successfully print.
In a further embodiment of the method, the step of securely sending the card file to the branch location may include distributing a virtual desktop from a server at the card services provider across the network to a virtual desktop client at the branch location.
In some embodiments, the card file may be stored at the branch location and the step of storing the reference number and at least some of the customer data further may include updating the card file with the reference number at the branch location.
In yet another embodiment of the invention, after the card file at the branch location is updated with the reference number, the method may include sending a card issue request from the branch location and receiving it in a hardware security module (HSM) at the card services provider. In this embodiment, in response to receiving the card issue request, the HSM may retrieve the PIN from the PIN database and apply the reference number to the calculations in the card file.
In another embodiment, a method for issuing a personalized financial transaction card is disclosed. The method includes receiving via a processor at a printing location a request to generate a personalized financial transaction card from a customer at the printing location, transmitting via the processor personally identifying information of the customer and card information to a card services provider, receiving at the printing location a card file from the card services provider wherein the card file comprises personalization data specific to the customer, generating via the processor the personalized financial transaction card based on the card file, and printing at the printing location the personalized financial transaction card.
In yet another embodiment, a system for instant issuance of a personalized financial transaction card is disclosed. The system includes a card services provider, a personalized financial transaction card printer located at a printer location, and a computing device located at a printing location including one or more processors configured by instructions to perform operations including receiving via a processor a request to generate a personalized financial transaction card from a customer at the printing location, transmitting via the processor personally identifying information of the customer and the card information to the card services provider, receiving a card file from the card services provider, where the card file includes personalization data specific to the customer, generating via the processor the personalized financial transaction card based on the card file and printing via the personalized financial transaction card printer the personalized financial transaction card.
In another embodiment, a method for instantly issuing a personalized financial transaction card is disclosed. The method includes receiving via a processor at a card services provider a request to generate a personalized financial transaction card of a customer at a printing location, personally identifying information of the customer, and card information; generating via the processor a card file by generating via the processor a reference number, card identification data, card image data, card personalization data, and calculation data based on the personally identifying information of the customer and card information; and storing the reference number, the card identification data, the card image data, the card personalization data, and the calculation data in the card file; transmitting via the processor the card file to the printing location; and receiving via the processor a verification message when the personalized financial transaction card has been successfully printed.
Thus, the system and method of the present invention will minimize upfront costs incurred by financial institution banks for hardware, software, licensing and maintenance fees. It will provide a secure process for customer selected PINs and rely upon secure web service applications to transmit card personalization data to drive the remote card printers.
Referring now to
Conventionally, the bank and its branches 15 are authorized to issue financial transaction cards, such as debit or credit cards, which are associated with a branded card transaction processor such as Visa® or MasterCard®. These transaction processors operate and control a global financial network of electronically interconnected card issuers, acquirers, merchants, and data processing centers.
The bank may contract with a card services provider to provide services associated with the issuance of a new credit or debit card to a bank customer. In the embodiment of
The instant issue server network 36 may include an active directory or domain controller 37, an application server 50, and a database server 41. Accordingly, the card services provider will maintain a PIN (Personal Identification Number) database 40 connected to the database server 41 that can securely store PINs selected by bank customers when a new card is issued.
As part of the instant issue personalization network 45, the card services provider may also operate a hardware-host security module (HSM) 47 to provide a secure environment for card data encryption, PIN calculations, sensitive cryptographic operations, secure key storage, and management of a large number of secure keys, as is known to a person of skill in the art. A hardware-host security module, as known to those of skill in the art, is a combination of hardware and software/firmware that is functionally connected to a PC or server to provide cryptographic functions. The HSM 47 may include a user interface and programmable interface. The physical part of an HSM, which may be a plug-in card or external device such as a physical Windows Server, may include tamper-resistant features.
Preferably, the functional interface between the card services provider networks 35, the public network 5, and the system web service 20 may include a web service “demilitarized zone” (DMZ) network 55. A demilitarized zone, sometimes referred to as a Perimeter Network, is a physical or logical sub-network that contains and exposes an organization's external services to a larger untrusted network, such as the Internet. The DMZ network 55 adds an additional layer of security to the communications link between the system web service 20 and the card services provider networks 35, so that an external attacker has access only to hardware in the DMZ and not in any other part of the networks. Within the DMZ network 55 is a card services provider web service 56. The web service 56 may be implemented using, for example, a Windows virtual server or Apache proxy server.
The DMZ network 55 and the system web service 20 may be interconnected by a private network connection or across the public network 5, such as the public Internet. In one embodiment, this connection may be implemented by an encrypted (e.g., IPSEC) Virtual Private Network (VPN) tunnel using an IPSEC endpoint device or security appliance 59. One conventional example of a security appliance that may be used is a Model ASA 5050 Firewall from Cisco Systems, Inc. The instant issue server network 36 may be coupled to the DMZ network 55 through a firewall 58, e.g., a virtual appliance. The HSM 47 is also functionally coupled to the instant issue server network 36 using a firewall 46, e.g., a virtual appliance.
The card services provider networks 35 may include an instant issue card print network DMZ 60 containing a print server 61. The instant issue card print network DMZ 60 may be connected to the DMZ network 55 through a firewall 38, e.g., a security appliance such as the Cisco ASA 5050 Firewall. The instant issue card print network DMZ 60 and the system web service 20 may be interconnected by a private network connection or across the public network 5. In one embodiment, this connection may be implemented by an encrypted (e.g., IPSEC) Virtual Private Network (VPN) tunnel using and an IPSEC endpoint device 62 such as the Cisco ASA 5050 Firewall.
The system 10 may also include hardware and software located at each branch location 15, including one or more desktop PCs or workstations 16 functionally coupled to the system web service 20 and a branch card printer network 17. In one embodiment, the branch card printer network 17 includes a card printer 18. The branch card printer network 17 may be isolated and therefore coupled to the instant issue card print network DMZ 60 using a VPN tunnel established between a firewall and IPSEC endpoint device and endpoint device 62. The branch card printer network 17 may also be connected to the public network 5 through firewall and IPSEC endpoint device 19. In the embodiment shown, a wireless internet connection is used. In one embodiment, the card printer 18 may be a Datacard Model FP65i Financial Card Printer from the Datacard Group.
In the embodiment of
The branch card printer 18 is functionally coupled to the client services provider print server 61 to securely receive card print commands. The card printer 18 may be equipped with a supply of blank card stock. The card printer 18 uses the data in a card file to imprint a blank card with personalized information associated with and selected by a customer.
Referring now to
In a second step 120, the customer selects a PIN (Personal Identification Number) that will be associated with the card to be issued to the customer. In a preferred embodiment, the personalized PIN is entered into the system by the customer directly, using a keypad-type data terminal at the branch or a telephone and voice recognition system, so that the bank operator does not see or hear the PIN. A PIN selection system that can be used for this purpose is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,132,521, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The selected PIN is communicated electronically 130 to a PIN database. In one embodiment, the PIN database is maintained remotely by a card services company that contracts with the bank to produce, encode, and issue personalized financial transaction cards to customers of that bank.
In a fourth step 140, the software associated with the PIN database generates a reference number associated with the customer and the selected PIN. The reference number is communicated to and may be stored in the card file associated with the customer as a file update. This updated card file may be used by the system software used at the branch location.
In one embodiment of the method, after the card file is updated following generation of the reference number, a card request is communicated 150 to an edit function software application in the hardware host security module (HSM) 47. The HSM 47 may be controlled by a card services provider remote from the branch. The HSM edit function application uses the reference number to retrieve 160 the PIN from the PIN database so that algorithmic calculations can be applied to the PIN in the card file.
In a next step 170, the card file is securely sent to a remote card printer at the branch location. In one embodiment, this step is implemented by a means of a virtual desktop server communicating with a virtual desktop client associated with the remote card printer and a PC or terminal located at the branch.
The customer's card is then printed 180 by the remote printer using the data in the card file. After the card is printed, a verification message may be sent 190 to the bank and to the card transaction processor. This verification message confirms that the card is ready for use by the customer. Alternatively, if the card printing is not successful, an error message is communicated 200 to the bank operator in the branch and to the transaction processor.
An embodiment of a method for instant issue of a personalized credit card to a bank customer located at a bank branch location can be further understood by reference to
The system web service 20 connects to the card services provider web service 56 over a persistent secure (e.g., IPSEC) tunnel and communicates the card instant issue request to the client services provider networks 35, as shown in
The card services provider application server 50 communicates a card print job to the card services provider print server 61, as seen in
The printer 18 communicates a card print job success or failure message back to the card services provider print server 61 (
There are several known techniques for negotiating an IPSEC tunnel. A common technique is to use a pre-shared key (PSK) shared between two public, static IP addresses. This type of tunnel allows either end to initiate the tunnel when traffic designated for the other end of the tunnel is detected. This traffic is known in the art as “interesting traffic”. When there is no “interesting traffic” (for a pre-configured period of time) the security association between the end-points will be terminated and thus the IPSEC tunnel is said to be “down.” This is not a problem for two public, static IP Addresses, as either side can initiate the tunnel to the public address on the remote end. However, when one side of the tunnel will not be static, or the IP address will not be known, or if it is behind a router/firewall that does Network Address Translation (NAT), only one end (the non-static, non-public end) may initiate the IPSEC tunnel. For the static, public (non-initiating) end of the tunnel to send traffic to the private, dynamic end, the tunnel must be aggressively kept “up” at all times. To achieve this, the system embodiment shown in
In the embodiment of
The PCI compliant instant issue server network 36a may include an active directory or domain controller 37, an application server 50a, one or more workstations 39, and an IPSEC administrative server 43.
Card services provider network 36b includes an application server 50b, a PIN database 40 connected to a database server 41 to securely store PINs selected by bank customers when a new card is issued, and a file server 42.
The application server 50a requests a card CVV Key Cryptogram as known in the art from application server 50b (
The application server 50a contacts the application server 50b and requests card image calculation information (
As shown in
Now having the card CV1 and CV2 values, the card personalization data, the card image information, the card image data, and the magnetic stripe data, the application server 50a communicates the card print job on a message bus (
In the process described above, while many of the data retrieval steps are performed sequentially, this is not required. For example, some or all of the data needed from the servers as illustrated and described with reference to
Thus, although there have been described particular embodiments of the present invention of a new and useful system and method for instant issue of personalized financial transaction cards, it is not intended that such references be construed as limitations upon the scope of this invention except as set forth in the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 18/139,033, filed Apr. 25, 2023, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/951,524, filed Nov. 18, 2020, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS,” issued as U.S. Pat. No. 11,687,894, on Jun. 27, 2023, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/373,321, filed Apr. 2, 2019, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,846,666 on Nov. 24, 2011, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS”, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/014,757, filed on Feb. 3, 2016, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,275,747 on Apr. 30, 2019, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS”, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/867,678, filed on Apr. 22, 2013, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS”, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/186,302, filed Jul. 19, 2011, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,429,075 on Apr. 23, 2013, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS”, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional App. No. 61/365,673, filed Jul. 19, 2010, and entitled “SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INSTANT ISSUE OF PERSONALIZED FINANCIAL TRANSACTION CARDS”, the entirety of each of the foregoing being incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61365673 | Jul 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 16951524 | Nov 2020 | US |
Child | 18139033 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 18139033 | Apr 2023 | US |
Child | 18789016 | US | |
Parent | 16373321 | Apr 2019 | US |
Child | 16951524 | US | |
Parent | 15014757 | Feb 2016 | US |
Child | 16373321 | US | |
Parent | 13867678 | Apr 2013 | US |
Child | 15014757 | US | |
Parent | 13186302 | Jul 2011 | US |
Child | 13867678 | US |