Do there exist "minor" credit cards?

Whoops, nevermind. I thought you meant the WB network, not Shazam network.

What gives? I said the wizard’s name 9 posts ago, and I still haven’t transformed. :confused:

Many thanks. Store credit cards simply didn’t occur to me.

Too many of those kicking around are bad, but having an extra couple thousand (or I suppose more, depending on your situation) is actually good. For example, my credit rating shot way up once I got myself a Chevron credit card, a Mens Wearhouse credit card, and got my VISA upped from $500 to $1000. I never carry a balance on the store cards, so that’s an extra $2500 in usable (if very specific) credit.

JCB (Japan Credit Bureau) is really big in the eastern world. According to its website (link above) they have 50 million+ cardholders; compare Amex with about 60 million. Most of the bigger hotel chains take it because of Japanese business travelers and such.

I managed billing & payments systems for a large ecommerce company and we acceptd JCB for online purchases starting around 1999-2000. I don’t work there anymore and I’m not sure if they still accept it.

Sears replaced my store charge card with a Sears Mastercard about 5 years ago.

I know this is a hijack, but what’s the point? What’s in it for the “associated” company to have a MC or Visa with their name on?

You can use the card anywhere a Visa or MC is accepted so it’s more useful to the customer.

Pardon the speculation here, but it is probable that the stores get either a break on the per-transaction fee they pay or some kind of small (legal) kickback. Plus, of course, they are encouraging customers to make larger purchases (charrrrge it!) without incurring the costs and risks involved in having and administering their own store card. In return, the credit card company gets more customers and the advantage of having the store “push” their card.

What I’m curious about is how the stores and credit companies split the cost of those “apply today and get a $50.00 credit toward your first purchase” kind of things.

Hmmm, hadn’t noticed that, thanks for the info.

FWIW, every time I buy anything at my local Sears store that is $20 or more, they always ask me if I want to put it on my Sears card, then they try to get me to sign up for one since I don’t have one, but I’ve never heard them call it a Sears/Mastercard, that’s why I thought it was still Sears only.

D.Pirahna

The question was whether AOL Time Warner would have a trademark infringement claim against the Shazam financial services company. Rjung’s point is correct: Identical trademarks can co-exist so long as the companies are not competing in the same market.

Sears’s house card still exists. I have one.

There was a Wards store still operating in the Washington, D.C., area about three years ago, until it was converted to a Target Greatland. Montgomery Ward still has a Web site. It seems that its mail order business is still in operation. And, indeed, they do still have their own house card .

With your permission, or, by ignoring the letter they sent to customers. The fine print said that if you did NOT want your account to be changed from a Sears card to a Sears Mastercard, you had to mail them back with your choice. I kept the Sears card…have enough Mastercards.

Well, now most Diners Card can be accepted at any Mastercard merchant, so its usefulness has increased considerably. Cite