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[Business] Are You Ready for iEconomy?


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The Mophie Credit Card Reader


Jack Dorsey’s Square
, Incase, Verifone and now Mophie — these companies’ credit card readers are turning the iPhone/iPod touch platform into an e-commerce engine.

Mophie, a Los Angeles-based company that makes accessories for the iPod/iPhone devices will release a credit card reader at CES in January 2010. The device is going to have a reader and a software that would allow small businesses to take credit cards. No more details are available just yet.

I, for one, would like to see Mophie or one of these other startups come up with a way for me to scan my own credit card to enter it into an app or web site. Even better, I’d love it if they married their hardware with the functionality of something like 1Password. In doing so, they could enable e-commerce via the iPhone apps. Think of it as iEconomy.

I know, I know — it’s easier said than done, considering it would need some deep, system-level mucking around, and Apple isn’t going to let that happen. But it should! By opening up, it would make the iPhone into an even more useful platform.  While I can understand Apple’s hesitation at opening up the iPhone, it can start with iPod touch, which is not tethered to a wireless phone company’s network.

By focusing on the consumers, these companies can also overcome two things: somewhat finite number of likely small business customers and get scale, which would allow them to get cheaper. And this would also help them overcome the slower adoption rates normally encountered when chasing the small business market. In fact, companies such as Visa, MasterCard and large banks should be trying hard to figure out how they can put these kind of readers in the hands of both merchants and consumers, thus shifting even more transactions into the electronic realm.

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The Verifone Card Reader


OK, you can see I am just way too excited about this stuff. Why not? I am encouraged to see such experimentation. It ties in with my big belief: the marriage of computing and connectivity without the shackles of being tethered to a location is the the biggest disruptive force of our times, and it will redefine business models for decades.

For a long time, companies like Symbol Technologies, a division of Motorola, have been making point-of-sale and handheld computing devices for non-office environments such as retail locations and warehouses. It is becoming obvious by the day — they are amongst those being disrupted.


[gigaom]



 

[Business] A Twitter Founder Turns to E-Payments : Square


Jack Dorsey, who came up with the idea for Twitter and is now its chairman, has unveiled Square, his new start-up. The idea: anyone with a mobile phone can accept credit card payments.


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Mr. Dorsey has been working on the idea for a while, and on Tuesday the company’s Web site went live. Square makes a small square device that plugs into any gadget with an audio input jack, including an iPhone or iPod Touch, and turns the device into a credit card machine.

Many small businesses cannot afford the steep fees that credit card companies charge. Square reportedly charges less, though it is not yet clear how much. The buyer signs the screen with a finger and gets receipts by text message or e-mail.

Square could be useful for people who run small businesses, like food carts or booths at art festivals and farmers’ markets, who would not otherwise be able to accept credit cards. Theoretically, it could even be a way for individuals to pay one another without exchanging cash or checks.

Cheri Mims is the owner of Lilybelle, a flower cart near Square’s office in downtown San Francisco. She, along with just a few other merchants, has been using Square for several months during a test period. Ms. Mims plugs the device into her iPod Touch and connects to the Internet using the Wi-Fi connection in the plaza where she operates her flower cart.

“It makes it so much easier to sell your product. Customers don’t carry lots of checks or cash,” she said. “The fact that you can go anywhere and run a business is amazing.”

She said she was surprised that customers were not nervous about swiping their credit cards using a device they had never seen. Fraud prevention will be a big challenge for Square. People who want to pay with Square can create accounts with photos so sellers can verify that the person using the credit card is its owner.

Alternative forms of payment are an exciting area for entrepreneurs and investors. Many companies, including eBay’s PayPal unit, are focusing on making it easier to pay for things online. Others, like Obopay, let people text message money to one another.

Square is starting with a limited roll-out and will be available to everyone next year. The company, which attracted a lot of interest from several venture capital firms, is backed by Khosla Ventures, which recently raised $1.1 billion to invest in start-ups.


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[nytbits]



 

[Tech] Billing Revolution - Mobile Payment Service


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Mobile payments company Billing Revolution announced that it now has a status as a Mobile Commerce Partner with PayPal, enabling PayPal merchants to conduct mobile credit card transactions using their existing PayPal Payflow Pro gateway accounts.

There are roughly 45,000 merchants that process transactions via PayPal Payflow gateway, and all of them now have the ability to sell their stuff to consumers on a mobile phone — although it’s unclear just how many of them will sign-up for the service.

And that’s about all we got to share regarding this news. Plus there’s the quote from Andy Kleitsch, CEO of Billing Revolution, who said: “Enabling mobile transactions for all PayPal merchants represents a strategic step forward for Billing Revolution. PayPal merchants wishing to conduct mobile credit card transactions can now safely and easily use Billing Revolution to process transactions through their existing PayPal accounts.”

Now we only have to see whether merchants will show interest and actually start implementing the new mobile payment feature. We certainly hope they’ll jump on board…


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About Billing Revolution

Billing Revolution, the leader in mobile commerce, enables merchants, payment processors and payment gateways to easily conduct credit card transactions with mobile users. Backed by SK Telecom Ventures, a global leader in mobile services based in Seoul Korea, Billing Revolution is changing the way merchants interact with mobile customers. Sharing information with mobile users is no longer enough. Every mobile strategy going forward should include a healthy dose of commerce, and Billing Revolution is here to make that dream reality. Billing Revolution is headquartered in Seattle, Washington, with sales offices in New York City.


[intromobile]



 

[Investing] The Future of Mobile Payments - Bling Nation


What recession? Startup Bling Nation just raised million in Series B funding from Balderton Capital for a new cell phone payment system. This brings the startup’s total funding to million since its launch in 2007.


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Bling Nation’s ambitions are to establish a revolutionary and comprehensive payments system for physical goods. Here’s how it works. The company partners with local banks in super small communities in the U.S. (where the prominent bank isn’t Citibank or Bank of America). Banks will then offer the consumers who use their services a Bling Nation and “Bank” branded chip that can be stuck onto any cell phone device. The chip will allow any user to make a payment directly out of their checking account similar to a debit payment.

Bling Nation also partners with all of the local merchants in given town, to give them special “Bling Nation” credit card machines that will scan the chips. The payment device will calculate the number of times a payee has made a transaction and as an added bonus, will automatically award the user with coupons, points or discounts, which the merchant determines. The device will read the chip and deduct the money for a purchase out of the payee’s bank account. Bling Nation even allows merchants to implement a security feature, in which upon purchase, the customer will have to enter a PIN code for larger transactions.

Currently, Bling Nation is being used in two communities in Colorado, including La Junta and Woodland Park, which are both small towns outside of Colorado Springs. Bling’s CEO Wences Casares tells me that the device will be implemented soon in towns in the Northwest and Southeast U.S. And Bling is in talks with universities and military bases to implement its system.

Bling monetizes the payment network by taking a cut of each transaction, which Casares says is very small. The reason Bling’s device is attractive to merchants, says Casares, is because they can avoid costly transaction fees associated with credit card purchases. Even with the debit fees and the Bling’s cut, merchants end up paying 50 percent less in transaction fees than if the purchase was through a credit card system.


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About Bling Nation


Bling Nation® offers a payment service, designed specifically for local and community financial institutions, that facilitates fast, efficient and secure payment transactions.  Using the Bling Nation service, local financial institutions can strengthen and grow the relationships with their clients by creating a local payment network for their consumer and merchant clients.  Our proprietary technology enables transactions to be processed more efficiently and securely than a traditional credit or debit card network, delivering value for everyone on the network.


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[techcrunch]