Seminar On Atm: BY, Soumya Ranjan Pallai REGD - NO:0701218400 7 Semester
Seminar On Atm: BY, Soumya Ranjan Pallai REGD - NO:0701218400 7 Semester
Seminar On Atm: BY, Soumya Ranjan Pallai REGD - NO:0701218400 7 Semester
INTRODUCTION
An automatic teller machine (ATM) is an electronic device
which allows a bank's customers to make cash withdrawals and check their account balances at any time without the need for a human teller.
Many ATMs also allow people to deposit cash or cheques,
with a magnetic stripe, which encodes the customer's account number, and by entering a numeric passcode called a PIN (personal identification number).
The world's first ATM was installed in Enfield Town in the London
most ATMs will retain the card as a security precaution to prevent an unauthorised user from working out the PIN by pure guesswork
ATMs are moving away from custom circuit boards (most of which are
based on Intel 8086 architecture) into full fledged PCss with commercial operating systems like windows and linux,bundled with Java.
Networking
Most ATMs are connected to interbank networks, enabling
people to withdraw money from machines not belonging to the bank where they have their account.
Deposits can only be made at machines belonging to the
bank has no branches, and even to withdraw local currency in a foreign country.
output devices.
Like any other data terminal, the ATM has to connect to,
dial-up machines.
Leased-line machines connect directly to the host
normal phone line using a modem and a toll-free number, or through an Internet service provider using a local access number dialed by modem
Leased-line ATMs are preferred for very high-volume
for a leased-line machine. The monthly operating costs for dial-up are only a fraction of the costs for leased-line.
what kind of transaction is required (cash withdrawal, balance inquiry, etc.) and for what amount. Also, the bank requires the cardholder's personal identification number (PIN) for verification. The PIN block is sent to the host processor in encrypted form.
An ATM has four output devices: SPEAKER- The speaker provides the cardholder with auditory feedback when a key is pressed.
DISPLAY SCREEN- The display screen prompts the
Sensing Bills
The cash-dispensing mechanism has an electric eye that
can ask for a journal printout showing the transaction, and then contact the host processor.
Settlement Funds
When a cardholder wants to do an ATM transaction, he or she provides the necessary information by means of the card reader and keypad. The ATM forwards this information to the host processor, which routes the transaction request to the cardholder's bank or the institution that issued the card.
If the cardholder is requesting cash, the host processor causes an electronic funds transfer to take place from the customer's bank account to the host processor's account.
bank account, the processor sends an approval code to the ATM authorizing the machine to dispense the cash.
The processor then ACHs the cardholder's funds into the
ATM Security
Early ATM security focused on making the ATMs
invulnerable to physical attack; they were effectively safes with dispenser mechanisms.
ATMs are now frequently found free-standing in places like
the use of the money inside the machine to a thief, by means of techniques such as dye markers and smoke canisters.
most transaction processors will require the use of the more secure Triple DES by 2005.
There are also many "phantom withdrawals" from ATMs,