What EMV Tokenization 2.0 Means for the Payments Industry

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Technical body EMVCo launched version two of its EMV® Payment Tokenisation Specification – Technical Framework in September. The market has evolved rapidly since v1.0 was launched in 2014 to address the needs of digital payments including eCommerce, and minimize the fraud risk associated to an exposure of primary account numbers (PAN) – so v2.0 has been eagerly anticipated by the ecosystem.

Here’s a few things that stood out for me among the key updates and revisions.

Continuous development

As with all technology, the innovation curve is too steep for standardization to keep pace. This update therefore brings the framework in line with many of the developments that have happened over the past couple of years. It also addresses a range of feedback from live implementations of the technology to smooth the path for widespread deployment.

For example, EMVCo released an interim note in 2016 on its EMV Payment Account Reference (PAR) which enables merchants, acquirers and payment processors to link together a cardholder’s EMV payment token and PAN transactions. Version 2.0 of the tokenization specification clarifies this at a standards level and sets the rules for BIN controllers (such as an ISO IIN Card Issuer) to implement PAR for their BINs.

Greater clarity

One particularly positive development is the inclusion of a common set of definitions and terminology in the framework. This may sound simple, but it gives the ecosystem a way to communicate effectively and avoid confusion and delays. Players can now easily understand both the similarities and differences in supporting and implementing tokenization with each of the international and domestic payment schemes.

Elsewhere, EMVCo has clarified the roles, responsibilities and minimum requirements for entities establishing a token program. This will ensure the effective generation, issuance and full lifecycle management of payment tokens as markets develop. The document also outlines a range of new and existing token requestor types to clearly define who can request tokens and their associated notable characteristics.

This increased clarity not only enables greater collaboration and stability, it sets the stage for even more rapid evolution and brings confidence in tokenization as a fraud prevention technology.

New tokenization use cases

Since the launch of the original framework, the use cases for payment tokenization have expanded significantly to allow for multiple types of cardholder- and merchant-initiated transactions. The new framework therefore addresses new use cases for eCommerce, including:

These additions can bring the fraud prevention of dynamic tokens to scenarios like recurring one-click-ordering and in-app payments.

Is this progress?

In a word, absolutely! While there is nothing necessarily revolutionary here, this update is both catching up with innovation and enabling it to continue happening in a sustainable, stable and secure way. We, as a developing ecosystem, now have a more complete reference manual to work from, which makes life easier for entities to clearly define their requirements when issuing an RFP, for example, and for technology providers to better understand what the market needs.

What next?

Work is ongoing. We are moving towards an end-game where all payments (and even all data!) are tokenized, so we need to get to a place where static tokens (like PANs) are no longer used and dynamic tokens are universal.

In our role as an EMVCo Technical Associate we look forward to continuing to support the future extension and clarification of the framework to enable further common understanding of the roles, concepts and use cases between all parties in the ecosystem.

*EMV® is a registered trademark in the U.S. and other countries and an unregistered trademark elsewhere. The EMV trademark is owned by EMVCo.

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