The payments world has changed immeasurably over the past few years, as technology such as contactless payments and NFC transactions have made it quicker and easier to pay for goods and services.
MasterCard has been one of the leading proponents of new payment technology, shown recently by its refresh of a campaign for Apple Pay users to travel for free across London’s TfL network – but what is next for the company?
“We’re starting to see real volume on stuff we’ve been talking about for the past five years”, he says, “many of the mobile payments solution we’ve been working on are finally going mainstream… they’re not just pilots or tests, but real, cool, interesting new things – real, normal people are using it!”
Along with the noted Apple Pay partnership, MasterCard has been rapidly expanding its QKR service, which is now used by restaurants and bars to help speed up payments and split bills. In the UK, QKR is already used by the likes of Wagamama, Young’s and Zizzi, with MasterCard looking to expand this further as it aims to find everyday use cases where its technology can provide a benefit.
The upcoming UK launches of Android Pay and Samsung Pay should also help provide a “hugely positive” boost to mobile payment adoption, Lindstrom says, opening up the technology as, “growth will continue dramatically”.
“The European markets in general are keen on new technology,” he notes, “we just see a lot of innovation all around Europe.”
“But with mobile devices you suddenly have the ability to increase security and make it easier to use at the same time…it’s completely changed the way we talk to consumers about mobile payments.”
MasterCard is now looking to expand its reach into the Internet of Things, as the world around us becomes smarter and more connected.
Lindstrom confirms that the company is “very much” looking at expanding into this space, with MasterCard’s stand showing off a smart fridge which acts as a shopping hub, providing details on food levels and allowing users to order straight from the kitchen (pictured above).
“For me, the Internet of Things is about giving consumers flexibility and choice,” Lindstrom says, noting that MasterCard is able to roll out a scalable and secure back-end network which can work with products and services of all sizes, “but we feel that there is no one size fits all solution.”
“We’re just trying to enable as many clever developers as possible to build these experiences for consumers.”
When TechWeekEurope saw the demo in action (pictured left), it all seemed to go very smoothly, as the user was able to quickly and securely pay for an item using a smartphone’s front-facing camera for authentication, along with another form such as a fingerprint or geo-location tracker.
And MasterCard now hopes that the system, which will be available in the UK and 14 other countries from the summer, will mean shoppers can complete a purchase online without ever needing to enter confirmation codes, passwords, or PIN numbers.
“Biometrics offer a unique opportunity to make transaction easy and safe at the same time,” Lindstrom says, ““(it) forms a strong part of any strong authentication system.”
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consumer incasso will be forbidden
Credit card will be replaced by debit card.
With photo and birthplace it is also IP-card.
It sounds very interesting. But it is now known that the authentication by biometrics usually comes with poorer security than PIN/password-only authentication.
Whether face, iris, fingerprint, typing, gesture, heartbeat or brainwave, biometric authentication could be a candidate for displacing the password if/when (only if/when) it has stopped depending on a password to be registered in case of false rejection while keeping the near-zero false acceptance.
Threats that can be thwarted by biometric products operated together with fallback/backup passwords can be thwarted more securely by password-only authentication We could be certain that biometrics would help for better security only when it is operated together with another factor by AND/Conjunction (we need to go through both of the two), not when oper http://www.marketplace.org/ated with another factor by OR/Disjunction (we need only to go through either one of the two) as in the cases of Touch ID and many other biometric products on the market that require a backup/fallback password, which only increase the convenience by bringing down the security.
In short, biometric solutions could be recommended to the people who want convenience but should not be recommended to those who need security. It may be interesting to have a quick look at a slide titled “Blind Spot in Our Mind & Eye-opening Experience” shown at
http://www.slideshare.net/HitoshiKokumai/blind-spot-in-our-mind-eyecatching-experience