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Credit Card Payments Evolve Beyond The Mobile Wallet


Mobile wallets can make paying by credit or debit card seamless: Tap your phone at checkout and you’re on your way. But mobile wallets are just the beginning. Payment networks and manufacturers are building payment functions into more devices — expanding your options as well as freeing up your hands.

You could find yourself buying gas from the dashboard of your car, groceries from your refrigerator door or dinner by flashing a smile. And you won’t even need your phone with you to make purchases on the go.

MORE DEVICES ADD PAYMENT CAPABILITY

Payment options already available or on the horizon include:

— Wearables. Connected “smart” accessories such as watches, bands and rings travel lighter than a phone. To use, the wearer holds a wrist or hand up to a contactless payment terminal. Visa tested these devices at the 2016 Rio Olympics to demonstrate possibilities, says Mark Jamison, global head of innovation and design at Visa.

The market will determine, he says, if fashion designers want to “embed payments into a ring or any other device.” One company privately testing similar tech is Token, whose smart ring — which performs a variety of functions, from opening doors to paying for purchases — has a waiting list.

In 2017, payment capabilities branched out from Apple and Android smartwatches to some Fitbit and Garmin fitness devices, meaning more people could leave their phone behind while working out.

By the end of this year, Visa expects merchants to have tap-to-pay capability at 50 percent of U.S. locations where face-to-face transactions take place.

— Virtual assistants. When voice payments are enabled on virtual assistants like Amazon Echo and Google Home, you can multitask and take care of “errands” in the moment with verbal commands.

CONNECTED DEVICES WILL BE THE NORM

Consider the number of mobile applications with saved payment information on your mobile device. In the future, you could free up some data and save a little battery life by using other connected devices:

— Cars. Visa and Mastercard are working with manufacturers to embed options in car models. Manufacturers are also testing ways to pay for gas, groceries, takeout, metered parking and other things from screens on vehicle dashboards.

“It’s still early, but we are focused on bringing that to life this year, to have the ability for you, as the driver, to not just order from one type of merchant,” says Stephane Wyper, senior vice president of new commerce partnerships and commercialization at Mastercard.

— Appliances. Appliances will get smarter in the future. A glimpse of what’s possible: Samsung’s Family Hub refrigerator, which lets you order groceries from the Groceries by Mastercard app; Whirlpool’s Smart Dishwasher, which, when synced with an Amazon account, can estimate when you’re low on detergent and order it automatically.

— Your body. Going totally device-free could also become an option. Biometric payments make it possible to pay by voice, face, iris scan or fingerprint. It’s not a big stretch from the biometric authentication currently used by some phones or applications.

“The technology itself has been around for a while, but consumers were skeptical of it,” Jamison says. They’ve since become accustomed to authenticating using a fingerprint via phone, and their preference has shifted from user ID and password to biometrics, he says.

In January 2018, CaliBurger restaurants launched a pay-by-face pilot program in Pasadena, California. Customers pay for their order by smiling for the camera and entering the three-digit number from the back of a credit card.

MORE OPTIONS, FEWER PASSWORDS

Current devices, apps and websites generally each require a separate profile with payment details. In the future, you could keep payment information in one place and sync it to all devices.

In 2017, Mastercard launched Consumer Control to offer consumers a central view of their cards across different channels. With access through their issuer, cardholders can add their cards to their favorite shopping sites and devices from one location.

The forecast for the future includes more convenient payment options. Visa estimates that 50 billion smart devices will be connected to the internet by 2020.

Merchants won’t begin accepting payments from everything overnight; for certain devices it may take a few years. For now, you can start exploring the options outside of your mobile wallet.

(AP)



One Response

  1. This is all well and good but without real security, we are opening up ourselves to thieves. The switch over to digital currency MUST be preceded with high level security. What has happened until today is that a digital system is set up and we wait and see what happens. Yes, they tell you everything is fine and dandy but the reality is just the opposite. A month does not go by without a serious security breach of a government or private system.

    There are already devices that can steal the information off the RFI embedded in a credit card and transfer the information to a blank card. It is called a digital pick-pocket. The same or a similar device can do the same with your smartphone wallet.

    The fact is that credit card companies do not make any serious effort to secure your information. They instead include thefts as part of their business expenses and pass on this cost as part of their fees. That is why they are generally so nice about cancelling a charge for a stolen card. You and all their other users have already paid for it.

    In most countries the law requires a contractor to file and have approve building plans prior to construction. This is so experts can review the plans and certify that the building is safe. Why is there nothing like this for building digital system? It took many centuries and thousands of death before the idea took hold that a licence should be required prior to building something so as to insure the safety of the public. How many Billions must be stolen before we insist on the same protection for or digital world????

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