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A postponement for prepaid: The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said Thursday that it will
Walmart's Go:
Face food: With the deployment of AI-based ordering kiosks, CaliBurger will never forget a customer's face. The burger chain is working with NEC Corp. of America to pilot a kiosk that uses facial recognition to identify customers for loyalty and (eventually) payments. "Face-based loyalty significantly reduces the friction associated with loyalty program registration and use; further, it enables a restaurant chain like CaliBurger to provide a customized, one-on-one interactive experience at the ordering kiosk," said John Miller, chairman and CEO of
Nothing makes sense anymore: Want to triple your company's value overnight? Just call yourself a blockchain company — even if you sell iced tea. Long Island Iced Tea Corp. has rebranded itself as Long Blockchain Corp., prompting a 200% rise in its stock price,
Japan to South Korea in an instant: A network of Japanese and South Korean banks is testing a service that uses the Ripple network to power real-time cross-border fund transfers. The Japan Bank Consortium, an SBI Ripple Asia-supported organization which counts 61 banks in Japan as members, will team with Woori Bank and Shinhan Bank, two of South Korea's largest financial institutions, reports
From the Web
The Washington Post | Thu Dec 21, 2017 - Uber isn't merely a digital middleman linking passengers and drivers, but rather an actual transportation service, the European Court of Justice ruled Wednesday, in a pivotal move that may spill over into the broader ride-hailing industry and the future of the on-demand economy. The decision opens the door for European cities to impose stricter regulations on the ride-hailing company as a taxi operator. That means Uber will have to abandon services, such as UberPop, that use nonprofessional drivers and instead abide by local rules governing taxis.
Reuters | Fri Dec 22, 2017 - The once-hot online lending industry has been battered by scandal and losses since last year, but one of the oldest forms of lending - store credit - is increasingly attracting tech companies aiming to supplant a retailer’s credit card. One such lender, San Francisco startup Affirm, is attracting investment and large customers by using a new approach to underwriting that allows it to approve more borrowers than traditional store credit cards.
Fox Business | Thu Dec 21, 2017 - Americans increasingly relied on credit cards to make payments in 2016, and made more of those payments remotely, according to new data the Federal Reserve released Thursday. The number of credit-card payments grew 10.2% last year, to 37.3 billion, compared with an annual growth rate of 8.1% over the previous three years. The Fed attributed the increase in part to "continued strong growth" in the number of remote payments, such as online shopping and bill paying, which represented 22.2% of all general-purpose credit- and debit-card payments. Remote payments increased 1.5% from 2015, the Fed said. By value, remote payments represented 44% of all general-purpose card payments.
More from PaymentsSource
Once 2018 arrives, significant new payment and data sharing rules will take effect in Europe, and the fallout is expected to affect banks, merchants and technology vendors globally.
Analytics can customize experience for consumers, and allow consumers to customize the experience for themselves, writes Matt Wilcox, senior vice president of marketing, strategy and innovation for digital banking at Fiserv.
Bitcoin, the “gateway currency,” is but one application in an enormous pool of possibilities that blockchain technology presents, writes Alexander Koles, CEO and founder of Evolve Capital Partners
Thousands of rank-and-file merchants are gaining access to validated point-to-point encryption (P2PE) for protection from malware within payment terminals, an attack vector that other popular security technologies might miss.