#payment

thefifthseason@venera.social

Image/Photo

“Buy with your eyes, pay with your glance!”After running pilot tests in Brazil and parts of the Asia Pacific for roughly two years, Mastercard is finally rolling out its biometric retail payments system in Europe. The world’s largest payment card company appears to be determined to wean consumers off not only cash, its eternal rival, but also credit and debit cards, its main line of business until now. To that end, it is piloting its Biometric Checkout Program in Poland in collaboration with local fintech company PayEye, which will be providing its iris and face biometric technology.


No doubt an interesting technology. Do we want it? Do we need it?
A person with a thick wallet will likely think this development is great, easy and practical, no need to carry around any card or phone or any other payment methods. People who are struggling with budgeting and having expenditure control, we know that using cards remove the sense of spending "pain" and it removes the ability to easily calculate the money use (with cash you literally see how much you have and what leaves you and what you have left). Going biometric payment wipes out that tiny inconvenience of a card or phone pay, I'd say making you blind to your expenditure (except, of course, in hindsight when the account has to be balanced). Sometimes things should not be convenient but hard. Even, or perhaps definitely, when it comes to micro payment, the one Euro here and two Euros there, it all sum up pretty quickly to a large sum. Eye/biometric payment will make this transaction so easy and tempting that one can quickly loose control.

#Fintech #MasterCard #Biometric #Technology #Payment
Mastercard Launches Its Biometric Retail Payment System in Europe, Using Poland As a Testing Ground | naked capitalism

anonymiss@despora.de

Reports show scammers cashing in on #crypto craze

source: https://nitter.it/web3isgreat/status/1532775402468478977

From Super Bowl ads to Bitcoin ATMs, #cryptocurrency seems to be everywhere lately. Although it’s yet to become a mainstream #payment method, reports to the #FTC show it’s an alarmingly common method for scammers to get peoples’ money. Since the start of 2021, more than 46,000 people have reported losing over $1 billion in crypto to scams – that’s about one out of every four dollars reported lost, more than any other payment method. The median individual reported loss? A whopping $2,600. The top cryptocurrencies people said they used to pay scammers were #Bitcoin (70%), #Tether (10%), and #Ether (9%).

#scam #crime #bitcoins #fail #money #finance #blockchain #news #warning

anonymiss@despora.de

In #Germany, people without #cash are currently starving in front of full supermarkets because the electronic #payment system has failed nationwide due to an expired #certificate.

#FirstWorldProblems at their best. And there are still weirdos who believe they will survive the end of the world with #Bitcoins when not even much simpler #technology runs smoothly.

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#btc #fail #software #banksters #money #pay #supermarket #trade #economy #problem #security #finance #news

deutschewelle@squeet.me

EU-Kommission wirft Apple Verstoß gegen Wettbewerbsvorschriften vor | DW | 02.05.2022

Einmal mehr geraten die EU-Kommission und der Apple-Konzern aneinander. Dieses Mal geht es um das Bezahlsystem Apple Pay. Der Konzern würde den Wettbewerb zugunsten seines eigenen Systems beschränken, sagt Brüssel.#Apple #ApplePay #Wettbewerb #EU #Payment
EU-Kommission wirft Apple Verstoß gegen Wettbewerbsvorschriften vor | DW | 02.05.2022

clehaxze@diaspora.psyco.fr

For those looking into buying the librem.one service. Please notice that if you already have a purism account from buying a Librem line of product. (Librem laptops, phone, key). Hold on. There is a bug in there system assigning payments of your librem.one account to your original account. (If you use the same backup mail address).

#Librem #Purism #Linux #Privacy #One #Payment

dredmorbius@joindiaspora.com

Content Syndication: Phil Hunt's Broadband Tax / Content Compensation Fund proposal, and the Rent-Seeking Economy

Phil Hunt of the Pirate Party UK was kind enough to comment on my Modest Proposal with a link to his own 2009 proposal, "A broadband tax for the UK?". It's a more complete (and well-thought-out) form of the concept addressing music, newspapers, and other media:

Further to my previous post suggesting that the UK isn’t going to institute a “3 strikes” law, there is speculation that the government might instead introduce a broadband tax, where ISPs’ customers will pay and the money going to the music industry to compensate for the loses they’ve suffered through P2P filesharing....

Continued at the dreddit

#businessmodels #piracy #philhunt #internet #payment #money