@FinextraMember: +1. Meanwhile, I've given your comment a Thumbs Up!
24 Jul 2015 13:10 Read comment
@AlexanderP: Until that happens - ETA 2020? - one iBeacon per tube station should suffice, provided the next update of Apple Pay - ETA Oct. 2015? - is enhanced accordingly.
24 Jul 2015 13:07 Read comment
Sorry but I have to disagree. I've mentioned many more reasons why payor would like to select credit card as mode of payment: Repudiation, deferred payment, greater security. While I don't see them covered in your response, it doesn't mean that I see them going away anytime soon. Besides, in the world's largest market, USA, the regulator has not capped credit card interchange; and banks have not moved towards an FPS equivalent. So, I'm sorry but I don't believe the "take that element away, add spontaneity" part to happen anytime soon.
24 Jul 2015 11:56 Read comment
@AndrewRothwell: Good question even if I say so myself - because I'd exactly this question when Apple Pay was launched in the US, particularly since the underlying wallet, Passbook, does have LBS functionality. At the time, I was told that payment cards can't be set by location since the 1-to-1 relationship that applies between loyalty card and location doesn't apply for payment cards. Even if this feature has somehow been implemented by now, it'd require the GPS to be on - which is otherwise not the case for Apple Pay to work - which poses two challenges, namely, faster battery drain and GPS tends not to work too well indoors. But iPhone6 is more powerful, these problems might be resolved, and I'm very eager to know the answer to your question.
24 Jul 2015 11:42 Read comment
Is there any regulatory stipulation on the price that can banks can charge for the API access? After all, banks have spent huge money on collecting and maintaining all this data and deserve to be compensated for sharing it with third parties.
I tend to agree with @CharmaineO about liability in the event of a data breach or any number of other things that could wrong with this approach.
On a side note, I've come across APIs from well before 2000 (e.g. SAP's BAPI), so the line crediting SFDC for launching APIs in 2000 must only mean cloud API. Besides, BAPIs could be implemented over mainframe instances of SAP, so banks shouldn't have too many problems doing a similar thing on top of their legacy systems.
Last but not the least, how does this regulation plan to safeguard the consumer's rights? After all, as a bank customer, I'd hate for all my data to be shared via APIs with every new fintech startup that comes around and for me to be told ex post facto that this has happened on account of some regulation. I've come across people who are not comfortable about their bank sharing their retail banking data even with its own corporate banking SBU.
23 Jul 2015 15:42 Read comment
Good post but, being on both sides of the table, I can see where these startups are coming from. Problem is most angels and VCs are themselves not pathbreaking and would rather stick to the "known devil" territory. Very early in the pitch, they want to be able to place the new startup in front of them into a pigeonhole defined by a successful startup XYZ viz. Uber of this, AirBnB of that, etc. When that happens, the next obvious question is how're you different from XYZ (and other XYZ-clones that're already in the market) and the -ers follow soon. I'm not saying that this is the right way to pitch but I've seen many sound, but clean-slate, pitches falling flat with investors who couldn't "get" them within the few allotted minutes.
23 Jul 2015 14:39 Read comment
@JamesBell: I know you're stating the "party line" but banks have as much to lose (interchange fees) due to friction as merchants (revenues), so I'd support merchants if they made a case for shared liability when 3DS is absent. On a side note, I've often wondered the same thing about lack of recent fraud data as you.
23 Jul 2015 14:25 Read comment
This must have played some part in USAA being named as the US Company with the Best Web Experience (Source: https://twitter.com/rshevlin/status/621055143698657280). On a side note, average savings in the pilot group works out to US$ 37.50 / mo [120000/(800*4)]. To a coffee lover like me, that sounds too measly to justify skipping a coffee! IMO, these Mobile Money Management Apps (MoMMA) aren't doing themselves any favors by harping on the example of coffee in a coffee-drinking nation like USA!
23 Jul 2015 14:12 Read comment
Even when you make bank switching less painful than root canal surgery, not enough people want to switch. I totally agree with the previous comments.
23 Jul 2015 13:48 Read comment
I love the way Stripe minces no words in holding 2FA / 3DS responsible for potential loss of revenues: "at Stripe we've so far opted not to support 3D Secure since we believe the costs outweigh the benefits." More at https://support.stripe.com/questions/does-stripe-support-3d-secure-verified-by-visa-mastercard-securecode. Thanks to Adam Nybäck - Anyro - Stockholm for sharing this Stripe link.
23 Jul 2015 11:21 Read comment
Ben GoldinFounder and CEO at Plumery
Derek RogaFounder and CEO at EQUIIS Technologies Switzerland AG
Hamza KhanFounder and CEO at Suburbia
Suruchi GuptaFounder and CEO at GIANT Protocol
Laxmi RamanathFounder and CEO at La Meer Inc.
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