# How Square Uses Your Phone's Location to Verify Credit Card Payments

> A system that uses GPS data from a customer's smartphone to confirm they are physically present at a store during a credit card transaction to reduce fraud.

- **Patent:** US 10198731
- **Original title:** Performing actions based on the location of mobile device during a card swipe
- **Owner:** Square Inc
- **Granted:** 2019
- **Status:** Active
- **Times cited:** 9
- **Field:** consumer_electronics, software, finance, ecommerce

## What it does

This patent describes a method for verifying that a customer is actually at a merchant's store when they use their credit card. The system first calculates the approximate location of a card reader by aggregating GPS data from many customers' phones who have previously shopped there. When a new transaction occurs, the system pings the customer's phone to get its current GPS coordinates at the exact moment the card is swiped. By comparing the phone's location to the established location of the card reader, the system determines if the customer is truly present, which allows the merchant to skip extra fraud checks.

## What it does NOT cover

- Does not cover fraud detection methods that rely solely on card-present indicators without GPS verification.
- Does not cover systems that track location using Bluetooth beacons or Wi-Fi triangulation instead of GPS.
- Does not cover transactions where the customer's mobile device is not linked to their payment card in the merchant's database.
- Does not cover the physical design or internal circuitry of the card reader itself.

## The clever bit

Instead of relying on the merchant to manually report their location, the system 'crowdsources' the location of the card reader by analyzing the GPS history of many different customers, creating a reliable map of where the reader actually lives.

## Real-world examples

1. Square Point of Sale systems
2. Mobile payment apps with integrated fraud detection
3. Contactless payment systems using geofencing

## Why it matters

This technology helps merchants like those using Square's platform reduce 'false positives' in fraud detection. By confirming the customer is physically present, the system can approve transactions faster and with less friction, which is vital for small businesses that cannot afford to lose a sale due to an overly cautious automated security system.

## Frequently asked questions

### What does How Square Uses Your Phone's Location to Verify Credit Card Payments cover?

A system that uses GPS data from a customer's smartphone to confirm they are physically present at a store during a credit card transaction to reduce fraud.

### Who owns patent US 10198731?

Square Inc owns this patent, granted in 2019.

### When does this patent expire?

This patent is expected to expire on February 5, 2039, when the invention enters the public domain.

### What is patent US 10198731 cited by?

This patent has been cited by 9 later patents that build on its ideas.

### What problem does this patent solve?

This technology helps merchants like those using Square's platform reduce 'false positives' in fraud detection. By confirming the customer is physically present, the system can approve transactions faster and with less friction, which is vital for small businesses that cannot afford to lose a sale due to an overly cautious automated security system.

### What does this patent NOT cover?

Does not cover fraud detection methods that rely solely on card-present indicators without GPS verification.

**Full plain-English explainer:** https://patentbrief.org/patent/us/10198731/shopify-e-commerce-platform

**Original patent:** https://patents.google.com/patent/US10198731

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_Source: PatentBrief — https://patentbrief.org. Patent facts are from public records; the plain-English explanation is PatentBrief's._
