I googled this. It feels like I remember signing a credit card receipt years ago. It says Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover dropped the requirement in 2018
What I wonder about is when they want you to sign on an electronic pad, but they don’t have a pen for the pad. They just tell me to use my finger. It never looks anything like my signature with a pen.
Sign? That’s all rather last century, dear chap! Over here in Olde England I just touch my card to the reader for any purchase up to £100 ($125). Above that I have to insert my card and enter a PIN. I haven’t written a cheque this millennium either…
When you have to sign (which is not so often – like it used to be), it’s amazing – actually sad what they will accept as a signature. If a scribble is good enough, what’s the point?
No, there is no central authority somewhere checking signatures on receipts to see if they match your handwriting. It is a remnant of the 20th century. I usually just draw a little cat face on there.
Pause for a moment and reflect on how we got civilization at all. Every improvement we see, every convenience we take for granted, every bit of knowledge we all benefit from, started with somebody asking “Why?”.
Wondering when was the last time a potential thief was using a stolen credit card & when they were asked to sign suddenly panicked…. “OH NOEZ! Curses! Foiled again!”
Now you are most commonly asked if you even want a receipt. Unless the card reader has a charge amount confirmation screen I am now in the habit of requesting a printed receipt so I can verify the final charges before leaving the establishment. I welcome “signing” the printed receipt. If I am incorrectly charged, it’s on me….literally.
While I agree with the comments, we used to have a small business. When a charge was contested by the customer we had to supply a copy of the signed receipt or the card company would find against us and refund their money. BTW: It was always that the customer forgot their purchase with us, the card company eventually cleared the transaction.
Be sure to press hard. You are making 5 copies! Oh, and if you used a credit card for gas, they wanted you to put your license plate number under your signature.
In the early days we placed the credit card on a special carbon paper and ran a roller over the card to imprint the info on the paper, then the customer signed that paper and received the carbon copy. Look how far we’ve come, just use your phone now.
About a month ago I asked a merchant how long they have to hold onto those receipts we all had to sign to prove that the signatures were valid. He admitted it was a couple of months, then they could throw them out. I think most businesses would rather not bother with signatures if they didn’t have to, either.
I volunteer as a poll worker. Voters must sign twice, once on paper, and once on a tablet. The tablet also stores their historical signature, which I compare to the ones they just did. I can attest that people really do sign in clearly recognizable ways, even when it’s just a scribble!
NEENER NEENER NEENER! Does this bother you? I’m not touching you. [singing] A million bottles of coke on the wall, a million bottles of coke! Take one down, pass it around, 999,999 bottles of coke on the wall. 999,999 bottles of coke on the wall…
I recall a story similar to this from back in the day. It was about how a young cashier was completing a credit card transaction for a customer. She noticed that the customer had not signed the back of his card, which was necessary for validating the identity of the customer. Pointing this out to the customer, she watched as he signed it. She then compared that signature to the one on the credit receipt he had just signed. She was satisfied once she confirmed that they matched.
BasilBruce about 16 hours ago
And later someone else sees the receipt with “Annoying Guy” written on it and says, “Oh, was Rat here?”
sirbadger about 16 hours ago
The FBI hands out special pens to bars and restaurants. The pens contain a hidden camera, fingerprint reader, and DNA collector.
Bilan about 16 hours ago
The only real reason for the signature is to validate the tip. If you don’t sign it, they can still charge you the base cost.
syzygy47 about 16 hours ago
I googled this. It feels like I remember signing a credit card receipt years ago. It says Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover dropped the requirement in 2018
daDoctah1 about 14 hours ago
“And just make a mark here where it says ‘I am not a robot’.”
pearlsbs about 14 hours ago
What I wonder about is when they want you to sign on an electronic pad, but they don’t have a pen for the pad. They just tell me to use my finger. It never looks anything like my signature with a pen.
ellisaana Premium Member about 13 hours ago
Hubby sent a check to his aunt and signed it Santa Claus. Her bank cashed it.
Steve_The_Beard about 12 hours ago
Sign? That’s all rather last century, dear chap! Over here in Olde England I just touch my card to the reader for any purchase up to £100 ($125). Above that I have to insert my card and enter a PIN. I haven’t written a cheque this millennium either…
win.45mag about 12 hours ago
Rats FULL name- You Dirty Rat
nosirrom about 11 hours ago
Checking out at the store and the cashier said: It’s over $100 so we need your signature. So pleas draw a smiley face or whatever you want on the pad.
Funny that we still call them cashiers when they rarely deal with cash. ;-)
Doug K about 11 hours ago
When you have to sign (which is not so often – like it used to be), it’s amazing – actually sad what they will accept as a signature. If a scribble is good enough, what’s the point?
Huckleberry Hiroshima about 11 hours ago
It sure is.
Croc Holliday about 10 hours ago
I used to write “Check ID” on the back of the card, next to the signature line. Hardly anybody ever did.
old_geek about 9 hours ago
The pharmacist pointed to the electronic pad and said “please sign there.”
So, I signed “There”
I was asked to leave…
Steverino Premium Member about 9 hours ago
I use a credit card to buy batteries. That way, they come charged.
KeithRoman about 9 hours ago
No, there is no central authority somewhere checking signatures on receipts to see if they match your handwriting. It is a remnant of the 20th century. I usually just draw a little cat face on there.
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 9 hours ago
Pause for a moment and reflect on how we got civilization at all. Every improvement we see, every convenience we take for granted, every bit of knowledge we all benefit from, started with somebody asking “Why?”.
erick.robinson about 9 hours ago
Wondering when was the last time a potential thief was using a stolen credit card & when they were asked to sign suddenly panicked…. “OH NOEZ! Curses! Foiled again!”
Ellis97 about 9 hours ago
That describes Rat perfectly.
ladykat about 9 hours ago
I agree with Pig. Rat can be very annoying.
Paulsy about 9 hours ago
Now you are most commonly asked if you even want a receipt. Unless the card reader has a charge amount confirmation screen I am now in the habit of requesting a printed receipt so I can verify the final charges before leaving the establishment. I welcome “signing” the printed receipt. If I am incorrectly charged, it’s on me….literally.
CountOlaf2.0 Premium Member about 9 hours ago
Whatever. It isn’t Rat’s credit card, anyway.
grocks about 8 hours ago
Definitely with Pig on this one.
NaryGancy about 8 hours ago
While I agree with the comments, we used to have a small business. When a charge was contested by the customer we had to supply a copy of the signed receipt or the card company would find against us and refund their money. BTW: It was always that the customer forgot their purchase with us, the card company eventually cleared the transaction.
pripley about 8 hours ago
Goat from PBS about 8 hours ago
Yep, sign it as “Uncooperative Rat.”
Snoopy Copter about 7 hours ago
I just finished my Winter Concert yesterday! It went great!
IndyW about 7 hours ago
In the early days we placed the credit card on a special carbon paper and ran a roller over the card to imprint the info on the paper, then the customer signed that paper and received the carbon copy. Look how far we’ve come, just use your phone now.
hoffquotes2 about 7 hours ago
Or sign on an digital screen that is illegible
christelisbetty about 7 hours ago
Lots of places , you just have to tap the card.
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 7 hours ago
About a month ago I asked a merchant how long they have to hold onto those receipts we all had to sign to prove that the signatures were valid. He admitted it was a couple of months, then they could throw them out. I think most businesses would rather not bother with signatures if they didn’t have to, either.
crocman48 about 6 hours ago
Dr office and hospitals are great places to catch diseases
jtburgess Premium Member about 6 hours ago
I volunteer as a poll worker. Voters must sign twice, once on paper, and once on a tablet. The tablet also stores their historical signature, which I compare to the ones they just did. I can attest that people really do sign in clearly recognizable ways, even when it’s just a scribble!
DaBump Premium Member about 6 hours ago
NEENER NEENER NEENER! Does this bother you? I’m not touching you. [singing] A million bottles of coke on the wall, a million bottles of coke! Take one down, pass it around, 999,999 bottles of coke on the wall. 999,999 bottles of coke on the wall…
Znox11 about 6 hours ago
I’ve been signing everything as Mickey Mouse since around 2000 just to see if anything will happen…so far Nothing.
zeexenon about 6 hours ago
When I do this, I keep the pen if I like its artwork.
hooglah about 6 hours ago
It doesn’t matter really. Once your card is scanned, or tapped. or whatever, your money is gone, signed or not.
mindjob about 3 hours ago
I’m patiently waiting for them to just read my thoughts
TurbosDad about 3 hours ago
On the back of my CC signature line, I printed CHECK ID. I can count on one hand the times they did…
Buoy about 3 hours ago
X marks the jerk.
jbruins84341 about 3 hours ago
I recall a story similar to this from back in the day. It was about how a young cashier was completing a credit card transaction for a customer. She noticed that the customer had not signed the back of his card, which was necessary for validating the identity of the customer. Pointing this out to the customer, she watched as he signed it. She then compared that signature to the one on the credit receipt he had just signed. She was satisfied once she confirmed that they matched.
awcoffman about 2 hours ago
How will people sign in the future when we don’t teach cursive anymore?