Ogon Wallet Stops Digital Pickpockets

Paul Pinkerton

High tech contactless payment cards are very much the norm today so protecting them while traveling is also something that needs to be thought about.

Disreputable people can very easily sneak payments from your card if they can get physically close to you with a portable scanning device.

A fellow traveler related to me that his friend had recorded ‘allegedly’ a person using a payment scanner on a crowded Russian underground train using one by placing it close to people in areas where a wallet or purse could be placed.

 

Ogon wallet clip can hold up to 7 bank cards and folded notes.
Ogon wallet clip can hold up to 7 bank cards and folded notes.

One way to stop this type of theft is to use a RFID screen, which could be a metal case or wrapping that stops a portable scanner from being able to read the data on the card.

However if you want something a little more stylish and so new, as its just about to come to the market in the next months then how about this Ogon Carbon Card Clip?

The Ogon wallet clip made of carbon fiber, with simple push with the finger to access your cards.
The Ogon wallet clip made of carbon fiber, with simple, push with the finger to access your cards.

This compact neat device can hold up to 7 cards, although I felt more comfortable at around 4. They are then protected from being scanned by improper use by fraudsters.

The cards are simply pushed into the clip and the spring tension in it holds the cards in place.

It’s light, slim, convenient and looks pretty trendy and can keep you safe from digital pickpockets.

 

The Ogon wallet clip compared to a normal more bulky wallet.
The Ogon wallet clip compared to a normal more bulky wallet.

This type of theft is not that widespread, but it does happen.

If a terminal had been issued and then that account owner goes on to become a thief, then the Merchant Acquirer (machine issuer) should quickly realize that thefts are occurring, as they would start to receive notification of fraudulent transactions being made.

Once this illegal action has been detected they can stop payments from being taken by disabling the device and plus they are more than likely to have all the information required to help find the perpetrator or perpetrators.

The question of liability?

Well, it seems that such fraudulent transactions do not fall to the actual cardholder as they should be protected but with the merchant acquirer.

Certainly, it does seem to make sense for us as individuals to make some sort of effort to protect our own bankcards and money plus what a neat way to do it!

https://www.ogondesigns.com

Source – Thanks to Geoff Moore :: Travel photographer, writer and blogger Geoff Moore has been a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers for 10 years and has traveled the world for over 30 years.

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jack-beckett

jack-beckett is one of the authors writing for Outdoor Revival