Eighteen months after introducing it to developers as a beta project (Digital Transactions News, Aug. 6, 2007), Amazon.com Inc. on Thursday commercially launched its Flexible Payments Service (FPS) as the latest entry in an increasingly crowded field of alternative-payment engines that includes industry giants PayPal Inc. and Google Inc. The …
Read More »Can Facebook Grasp the Payments Opportunity Now in Front of It?
This is the fifth installment of a six-part series on how Web 2.0 is likely to transform the payments business. Prior articles focused on how new providers are leading the transition from the first generation of e-commerce, where a buyer had a one-way relationship with a seller's Web site and …
Read More »The Recession Is Sending Rates of Friendly Fraud Up, Processors Say
With the recession throwing more and more people out of work by the day, payments processors are reporting that their merchants are experiencing sharp increases in e-commerce chargebacks stemming from so-called friendly fraud. This is the fraud that results when a consumer repudiates a transaction as unauthorized in hopes of …
Read More »Credit Losses at Bill Me Later Climb Past 8% But Don’t Faze eBay
Credit losses at Bill Me Later Inc. are manageable despite the economic downdraft of the past year, officials at eBay Inc. told analysts recently. The Timonium, Md.-based provider of so-called transactional credit for online transactions, which eBay bought last year and paired with its PayPal online-payments unit (Digital Transactions News, …
Read More »The Challenge Confronting PayPal, Google, And Amazon
This is the third installment of a six-part series on how Web 2.0 developments are likely to transform the payments business. The online marketplace is morphing to payments embedded in top-line oriented-marketing services, and integrated infrastructure where small retailers can share the scale and cost savings of bigger players. Both …
Read More »How the End of E-Commerce As We Know It Spawns Opportunity
This is the second installment of a six-part series on how Web 2.0 developments are likely to transform the payments business. Web 2.0 is still in its infancy, and skeptics about its business models abound. Meanwhile, most online merchants are still scrambling to shore up and extend their current Web …
Read More »MasterCard’s $100 Million Orbiscom Deal Points to New Markets
In a deal that could better position MasterCard Inc. as a provider of transaction services for mobile and online commerce, the Purchase, N.Y.-based card network announced on Monday it is buying Orbiscom Ltd., a Dublin-based software company, for $100 million. MasterCard, which has been working with Orbiscom for the past …
Read More »How the Onset of Web 2.0 Puts E-Commerce up for Grabs
This article kicks off a six-part series by electronic-payments researcher and consultant Steve Mott that explores how the next generation of e-commerce will be defined by the Web 2.0 phenomenon, leading to dramatic changes in the transactional environment. The final installment of the series will appear in the February issue …
Read More »Bill Me Later Not Likely to Suffer from Its Ouster from Amazon
Not surprisingly, Amazon.com Inc. disclosed this week that it would no longer accept Bill Me Later Inc., the fast-growing online credit system now owned by Amazon archrival eBay Inc. But at least one analyst expects the damage to Bill Me Later will be minimal despite the loss of access to …
Read More »Facebook Balks, But Expect Social Networks to Launch Payments
Don't look for Facebook to get into the payments business any time soon. According to a report this week in “Inside Facebook,” a Web site that tracks Facebook developments for software developers and marketers, the social network has put on hold a payments platform that the network had announced a …
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