That article is pretty old and I think a lot of banks have followed B of A's lead on the debit card issue. My debit card number has actually been swiped three times now ... once it was used in Australia while I was in California, once it was used to download a bunch of ring tones and cell phone games and some Norton software, and once the bank just canceled the card because they said it had been "intercepted" during an electronic transmission. (I am not sure I buy that one, since I had not used it online during the relevant time, only at Safeway and at an autoparts store.)

But I have never lost any money from any of those transactions, all of which were with B of A. With the Australia thing, they credited my account immediately when I reported the problem, and then I had to sign an affidavit saying that it wasn't me, I was in California at the time, etc. With the ring tones and the Norton software, I contacted the online retailers and they credited me, and of course I also called the bank and canceled the card. And the bank rep told me that if I had any problems with the credit from the retailers, that the bank would credit me since the charges were fraudulent.

I have actually had less trouble with that than friends have had disputing fraud on actual credit cards.