Tag: mobile payments service

Mobile payments service, Square, fined $507,000 in Florida

The company received the fine from the Office of Financial Regulation for operating unlicensed.

Square has found itself in some hot water in the state of Florida for operating a mobile payments service without first receiving a money transmission license from the Office of Financial Regulation in the state.

This is not the first time that the company has been pursued by a state financial regulator in the U.S.

Though this most recent fine was in Florida, for $507,000, it had also been served a cease and desist order in March 2013, in Illinois. In that case, the cause of the problem was also for its failure to become licensed before it began operating its mobile payments service.

The most recent fine was for offering mobile payments services for two years without having a license.

Mobile Payments - Fine issued in FloridaThe span of time for which the fine applied was for operations as a mobile payments service from February 2010 through November 2012. According to the Florida payment order, the issue was that “Specifically, the Office finds that Applicant’s existing payment processing services (including Square Register) and stored value/prepaid access card services required a license under Florida law.”

The order was dated on July 23, 2013, and it points out that the first application to be a mobile payments service in Florida, by Square, was in November 2012. After the company paid the $507,000 by way of a wire transfer, Square was granted a money transmission license that made it possible to operate legally from that point onward. The order states that the company “neither admits nor denies” being guilty.

According to a spokesperson from the Square mobile payments company, Aaron Zamost, “We worked with Florida to resolve our application and receive our license to operate as a money transmitter in the state.” He added that “We look forward to continuing to help merchants across Florida grow their business with Square.”

Last year, the mobile payments service managed to raise $341 million (which includes a strategic investment from Starbucks of $200 million in September 2012), so the fine doesn’t appear to be too damaging at this time. However, in the Illinois case, things were more difficult, and it has since been used as a case regarding the lack of clarity in some of the state licensing laws.

Mobile payments solution to bring Paydiant and Pulse together

The two companies will be working together to be able to offer a purchasing service to its customers.

Pulse, a debit/ATM network, has now announced that it will be working with Paydiant, which is a cloud based mobile wallet provider that also offers redemption platforms, in order to be able to offer participants a mobile payments and commerce solution.

The Paydiant solution makes it possible for Pulse partners to rapidly deploy contactless transactions.

These partners include both merchants and financial institutions. Pulse is hoping that the new partnership will make it possible for those partners to rapidly and easily take on contactless mobile payments as well as cash access functionalities in order to appeal to consumers who are using their smartphones on a rapidly growing basis for a large number of their day to day activities.

Mobile Payments PartnershipThe capabilities of these two companies could potentially produce a very powerful mobile payments solution.

The mobile payments wallet platform at Paydiant is software based and functions in both existing and the latest smartphones, which include both Android and iOS devices, in addition to with existing point of sale terminals that are already being used by merchants who are participating in the program. This means that there will not be any new hardware required, according to the Pulse news release.

Paydiant has explained that its new mobile payments solution provides two new capabilities that could make it possible to accelerate the use and the adoption of digital wallets via smartphones, while improving the efficiency of the transaction process and enhance the overall consumer experience within any ATM or retail point of sale environment where this service is accepted. Those two capabilities are: a software-only merchant acceptance interface and a white label digital wallet app.

The executive vice president of product management at Pulse, Judith McGuire, spoke of the mobile payments opportunity and partnership with Pulse by saying that “Paydiant’s platform enables us to offer both our financial institution participants and merchant partners their own branded mobile wallet.” She went on to add that “Paydiant’s unique approach is an important part of Pulse’s overall mobile services strategy.”