2012年11月5日月曜日
Google Wallet May End Up Inside Your Actual Wallet
Several   outlets are reporting, based on screenshots   posted by Android Police that Google is (or "may be" — CNet   calls the report "loosely sourced") about   to introduce a lower-tech variant on its smartphone-based Google Wallet payment system. Instead of transferring   payment information from an NFC-equipped phone, this would mean a physical   payment card (like a conventional plastic credit or debit card), but one linked   via Google's databanks to the user's existing bank or credit accounts. Upsides:   less to carry, a simple way to suspend or cancel service on them (should the   card be lost or stolen), and doesn't require you to carry your phone to make a   credit or debit transaction — handy, since NFC readers are still thin on the   ground. Downside: while perhaps no worse than putting the same information on   your phone, it's one more step toward giving a third party all of your personal   information in one place. A card that fits in a wallet probably makes a lot of   sense: I live in a city with at least three pay-by-phone options in trials or   fully available (CitiBank, Isis, and Google Wallet), but I can't buy ice cream   or coffee with them yet. And there's no reason a card-shaped token couldn't use   mag-stripes and NFC, too.
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