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standard by International Organization for Standardization, 04/01/1998
This International Standard is applicable to the use of Integrated Circuit(s) Cards issued by Financial Institutions in retail financial applications in an interchange environment. It specifically addresses :
the functions required for financial interchange ;the messages (commands and responses) between the Integrated Circuit(s) Card (ICC) and the Card Accepting Device (CAD) to effect those functions: generic commands and responses are taken from ISO/IEC 7816-4 and when these are insufficient, this International Standard provides the required commands and responses ;the identification and definition of data elements which may or shall be used during exchanges between the ICC and the CAD ;the logical structure of files and records used in messages and how data elements are mapped into these messages.This part of ISO 9992 describes the application o! the rules of interindustry Standards ISO/IEC 7816 series, to use 1C Cards in international interchange for financial transactions.
This part gives the methods to implement the security architecture described in ISO 10202 series of International Standards to achieve the security requirements for financial transactions.
It initially describes the functions, messages and data elements which may be needed for financial transactions. In the future, additional functions, messages or data elements may be considered to cover the following maintenance operations in international interchange : ADF allocation, personalisation, activation, deaclivation, reactivation, termination and key termination, and CDF deactivation and reactivation.
This International Standard is independent of the capabilities of the CAD (connectable or not, attended or unattended) and its status at the time of the transaction (on-line or off-line).
This International Standard is based on the existence of a logical data structure and provides rules for the way data in the ICC are logicall referenced by the CAD. It does not define how data are physically structured in the ICC.