Talking credit helps visually impaired people make transactions safely
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Stephanie Khoeungâs white walking cane glides along a sidewalk as she navigates through a Paris suburb. She lost her sight when she was 12 after a series of failed operations.
Now, as an adult, everyday situations are often challenging for Khoeung. Things like buying a sandwich.
Credit cards are not easy for visually impaired people to use because they canât always see the terminal to know where to insert their card. But the main challenge for blind people is that they canât confirm whether the price the retailer keys in is accurate.
To alleviate that problem, French tech firm Thales has developed a credit card that talks. It was the French who invented the chip card, with its four-digit-code security system. Thales is also developing a biometric credit card that can read a userâs fingerprint.
Pierre Paladjian, the companyâs banking personalization program manager, said the talking card takes this technology one step further.
âThis credit card doesnât only contain a payment chip but another piece of electronics that enables you to connect it to the userâs cellphone,â he said. âThis connection enables the reception via Bluetooth of all the information that is displayed on the card payment terminal.â
The smartphone then vocalizes that transaction through a speaker or headphones in French, English or a number of other languages.
âThe transaction amount is 25 euros,â the phone uttered as Khoeung completed a transaction.
âItâs useful for visually impaired people like me [to] get confirmation of the amount the cashier says weâre paying because weâre easy to fool,â Khoeung said. âThey can tap in any amount, we wouldnât know.â
Paladjian said an opinion poll carried out with visually impaired people found 9 out of 10 had been victims of shopkeeper fraud or error.
There are around 250 million visually impaired people worldwide, he said.
A bank in Turkey began offering the new card to customers in January. Others in Europe and the Americas are expected to follow soon.
Now, in theory, the growing shift to e-commerce could present advantages for people with disabilities, but as we’ve covered on the show in the past, a lot of retail websites aren’t optimized for accessibility.
Last year, my colleague Kimberly Adams spoke with Josh Basile, who works with an accessibility company and relies on assistive technologies himself, about how many shopping websites lack basic features to help those with disabilities navigate them. A report from Utah State Universityâs WebAIM Million Project found more than 96% of the top 1 million home pages still don’t comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act.