Credit Card Imprinter

(en.wikipedia.org)

15 points | by tosh a day ago ago

7 comments

  • chiph a day ago ago

    None of the cards I have today have embossed numbers on them. Which I like as they don't leave an imprint on my wallet's leather. But to use one back in 1995 the clerk would have to hand-write all the numbers and expiration date[0] on the credit slip. A process that is fraught with error.

    [0] After looking it up in the booklet of known bad cards that was mailed to the store, or calling their card processor's phone number to check.

  • Spagbol a day ago ago

    I visited Nunavut in 2019 as a researcher, the town I was in still used these at some places. Being born after their widespread use I had no idea what it was

  • unnamed76ri a day ago ago

    Something I had to use occasionally in my retail days when our credit card system would go down. Weird to see it written about in historic terms.

  • semiquaver 21 hours ago ago

    The last time I personally witnessed one of these being used was on an Amtrak train in approximately 2006.

  • polivier a day ago ago

    I remember this from a taxi ride in the early 2000s. Even then they were pretty rare.

  • rorylaitila a day ago ago

    If I remember correctly, up through 2008 even, we would punch the card into the terminal for authorization, use the imprinter to have the customer sign and track the number, and then had to phone call the processor to capture the cards at the end of the day.

  • jgalt212 a day ago ago

    These lasted much longer than the paper Warning Bulletins.

    https://www.investopedia.com/terms/w/warning-bulletin.asp