Tag: nfc mobile payments

Mobile wallets losing favor in the world of mobile payments

wallet mobile payments declineMobile payments sector seeing a decline in wallet applications

Mobile commerce is quickly becoming a major trend among consumers around the world. Many people consider mobile payments to be a simpler, more convenient way to pay for goods and services, partly due to the fact that mobile technology is so prolific. Much of mobile commerce has been powered through the use of mobile wallets, lightweight mobile applications meant to store and use financial information. While mobile commerce has been seeing strong growth over the past two years, these mobile wallets have not been growing more popular among consumers.

Wallets had been popular, but focus on NFC drives consumers away

In the advent of mobile payments, mobile wallets had been considered a necessary platform for mobile commerce as they provided much of the needed infrastructure for this form of commerce to work. Many of these applications are based on NFC technology, which allows for digital information to be transmitted over short distances. The problem, however, is that NFC technology is not universally supported throughout the mobile space. Indeed, the technology has been losing support from many of the companies and organizations that have emerged as strong players in the field of mobile payments, such as PayPal.

Consumers, as well as device makers, are favoring options free from NFC

Mobile wallets are beginning to give way to other applications that take a more accommodating approach to mobile payments. These applications seek to enable a wider range of consumers to participate in mobile commerce, which had, in the past, been largely restricted to those with NFC-enabled devices. These devices are still rare despite the efforts of companies invested in mobile commerce to see their expansion. A growing number of device manufacturers are beginning to abandon NFC technology, favoring mobile commerce platforms that offer some alternative.

Wallets may still be valid in mobile payments if an alternative to NFC is found

As device makers, like Apple, begin to move away from NFC technology, mobile wallets may be due for some change. These applications still receive significant support from Google and Isis, but the NFC-capabilities of these platforms make them unaccommodating to the growing interests of consumers. If organizations focused on mobile commerce want to retain the foothold they have established in this still emerging sector, they may soon have to consider finding an alternative to NFC technology.

Intel and UnionPay team to take on mobile payments

Intel and UnionPay to develop new mobile payments platform

Intel has announced a new collaboration with China UnionPay, the only domestic bank card organization in China. The two companies will work together to create a new, secure platform for mobile payments. China has become a hub for mobile technology and many consumers are beginning to show strong favor for mobile commerce. In order to accommodate the needs of consumers, UnionPay has begun to take the issue of mobile payments more seriously.

Intel to leverage its security technology for new platform

Security is one of the major challenges that continues to serve as a roadblock to the widespread adoption of mobile payments. Mobile devices are beginning to traffic a significant amount of valuable financial information. This information has become a very attractive target for hackers and malicious groups looking to exploit this information. To address the security problem, Intel leveraging its Identity Protection Technology for the new mobile payments platform. UnionPay accounts for 3.5 billion bank cards, which are accepted in at least 141 countries around the world. Providing these consumers with a secure way to engage in mobile commerce may help mobile payments finally attain the momentum needed to begin replacing more conventional forms of commerce.

UnionPay showcases NFC-based mobile commerce service

UnionPay has also begun showing off its Quick Pass service, which in a mobile commerce service that makes use of NFC technology. More than 1.1 million NFC-enabled point-of-sale terminals were installed in December of 2012 in order to serve as an infrastructure for the Quick Pass service. This service is meant to perform alongside the mobile payments platform that Intel and UnionPay are currently developing.

Mobile commerce continues to find success in Aisa

Mobile commerce has found a great deal of traction in the Asian market. With mobile technology penetration high in many sectors of the market, mobile commerce has been able to establish a strong foothold in several countries. There are, of course, security concerns regarding the widespread adoption of mobile commerce, but companies like Intel and UnionPay are working to put these concerns to rest through the establishment of adequate security systems that will protect a consumer’s financial information.

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