Credit card payment with STRIPE

Stripe is the high-tech security benchmark. Companies like Dailymotion, Twitter, Apple, Adidas, etc... use its cutting-edge technologies. Stripe is a secure web payment infrastructure (PCI level 1 certified, the highest level of security) that is very efficient. It allows you to pay simply using your credit card number without leaving your web app. At no time do we have access to the customer's credit card number, Stripe being secure and taking care of the payment entirely. In addition, it is not necessary to have or create a Stripe account to be able to make a payment.

CCB with Stripe

Your banking data is encrypted. It does not circulate in clear text on the internet and cannot be intercepted. Your banking data, card number, expiration date, are not communicated to us under any circumstances.

Security according to Stripe

Stripe uses the standardized encryption system called “the SSL protocol”. It is materialized, when you are on the site by a padlock in front of the web address

Is Stripe safe?

When purchasing online using Stripe, the entire transaction is carried out on our banking site in encrypted mode.

To use Stripe you need

- the bank card number
- the expiration date
- the visual cryptogram (the 3 digits on the signature strip of your card)
- 3D Secure

CB payment with STRIPE

Stripe complies with the highest security standards for online payments!

Payments by credit card (Bleue, Visa, Mastercard) are made in full at the end of the order. All credit card payments are 100% secure by the Stripe platform, in accordance with French and international interbank security measures. Stripe allows Internet users to make online purchases in complete security and peace of mind.

Your banking data is encrypted (SSL technology). It does not circulate in clear text on the Internet and cannot be intercepted. Your banking data (card number, expiration date, etc.) are not communicated to us under any circumstances.



Is a payment with Stripe secure?

When purchasing online using Stripe, the entire transaction is carried out on our banking site in encrypted mode. You temporarily leave the merchant's site in complete transparency to save your bank details. This is the guarantee that: the merchant will never know your card number!

Stripe will not be able to know anything about the details of your purchases since only the total amount and the order number are transmitted to us by the merchant.

 

Stripe Security

Stripe uses the standardized encryption system called “the SSL protocol”. It is materialized, when you are on the payment page, by:
- A closed padlock in the corner of your browser.
- The https:// mode instead of http:// in the address bar of your browser.
- When you switch from non-encrypted mode to encrypted mode (and vice versa), browsers display a message warning you of the change. Check these elements before entering confidential data, it is a guarantee of security. In order to use the most powerful protocols, we recommend using a browser with the latest version.


Stripe uses the following methods to secure its payment pages:

- All card numbers are encrypted on disk with AES-256.
- Stripe’s infrastructure for storing, decrypting, and transmitting card numbers runs independently, without sharing any sensitive information with Stripe’s core services.


Security at Stripe also includes the following certifications and licenses:

- PCI DSS Level 1 Certification Money Transfer License in the United States
- Compliant with the European DSP2 directive and strong customer authentication
- SSAE18/SOC 1 Type 1 and 2 Reports E-money License in Europe


What information is needed to use Stripe

Stripe will ask you for the following information:
- The bank card or private card number (15 or 16 digit numbers)
- The expiration date
- The visual cryptogram (last 3 or 4 digits on the signature strip of your card)
- With the deployment of 3D Secure (recognizable by the "Verified By Visa" or "MasterCard SecureCode" logos) your bank will also ask you for amounts over €30 when paying to authenticate yourself with confidential information to be entered on a web page of your own bank.