Posts tagged sticker
How Mobile Candy Dish Combines Handset-Based P-to-P with NFC
(April 10, 2008) A 3-year-old startup in Alameda, Calif., is introducing a mobile wallet that combines contactless payments based on near-field communication (NFC) technology with person-to-person payments and mobile banking. Mobile Candy Dish Inc. last week rolled out its Blaze Mobile Wallet, which works on the AT&T Mobility and Sprint Nextel wireless networks and features an NFC sticker linked to a prepaid MasterCard account.
The new wallet product combines mobile-banking and –payment features that many banks and processors have been introducing separately. Processors like PayPal Inc. and Obopay Inc., for example, have rolled out P-to-P products based on handsets, while the bank card networks and the wireless operators, as well as processor First Data Corp., have launched several pilots for NFC, a technology that allows consumers to pay for goods at the point of sale by tapping or waving their mobile phones on or near a reader.
With a paucity of handsets in the market equipped with NFC chips, the Mobile Candy Dish offering relies on an NFC component that adheres to the back of the phone. The component is about the size of a quarter and has a thickness equal to about two dimes, says Eddy Crochetiere, marketing manager for Mobile Candy Dish. Transactions settle against the prepaid MasterCard, which consumers can load at a Mobile Candy Dish Web portal called My Wallet. A plastic card to go with the account is optional.
With the NFC sticker affixed to the phone, the device can perform contactless transactions at any of the estimated 40,000 merchant locations that accept contactless bank cards. Crochetiere says the sticker is a transitional technology to allow NFC transactions to take place until handset makers are able to gear up to produce commercial quantities of phones with built-in NFC capability. When this happens, consumers will be able to load other accounts into the wallet that they may have been using with a contactless card.
By relying on a sticker, Mobile Candy Dish is following a strategy similar to one being used by Princeton, N.J.-based Heartland Payment Systems, a merchant processor, in a mobile-payments program it is running for Slippery Rock University. In this program, students and faculty use cell phones with NFC stickers to pay for products ranging from vending-machine items to goods at off-campus merchants (Digital Transactions News, Aug. 22, 2007).
Supplementing the NFC capability is a mobile-banking and P2P service that allows consumers to pay bills, transfer funds, and do balance inquiries. Users of this service must be customers of any of some 8,000 financial institutions accessed by Redwood City, Calif.-based Yodlee Inc., whose aggregation technology Mobile Candy Dish uses to support its wallet software. Mobile Candy Dish charges consumers $4.99 per month to use the wallet, though Crochetiere says there are no per-transaction fees.
Crochetiere declines to project how many consumers Mobile Candy Dish expects to adopt its wallet, in part because the company is in negotiations with wireless carriers to make the application a so-called on-deck service. On-deck applications are those the carriers feature on the first screens they present, leading to more likely adoption and use.
The company’s first product, introduced in 2006, is called Movie Candy, which allows consumers to use their phones to look up movie listings, get directions to a theater, view film clips, and pay for tickets. Users buy tickets by charging them to a card they’ve enrolled through the Web portal. They receive on their phones a bar code or numerical code they show at the box office when they arrive. The service, supported by movietickets.com, carries a $1 fee in addition to the price of the ticket. Because Movie Candy is part of the on-deck negotiations the company is pursuing, Crochetiere will not divulge how many users the product has attracted.
Movie Candy is part of the new wallet product, as are other features, such as an application that manages frequent-flyer and other loyalty balances and keep electronic coupons.
Belgacom launches PingPing, tests NFC stickers
The Belgian telecoms operator has launched a series of mobile payment initiatives under the new PingPing banner and has partnered with Accor Services, Coca-Cola and supermarket chain Delhaize to test three different applications for NFC tag payments.
Belgacom has announced a major move into the mobile payments business and is to carry out NFC tag tests with a number of high profile partners, including Accor Services, Coca-Cola and supermarket chain Delhaize, all under a new mobile payments brand name ‘PingPing’.
The PingPing brand and its logo will, says Belgacom, "indicate where customers can make mobile payments, with all its advantages. Fast, user-friendly, interactive, requiring no small change etc, the system can be accessed by all mobile phone users, regardless of their operator."
"Partnership and applications are conceivable in all business sectors," says the company.
The new trials with Accor, Delhaize and Coca-Cola are designed to explore a range of potential use cases for PingPing.
The Accor Services pilot will use its Ticket Restaurant meal voucher service. For the trial, 500 Belgacom employees and 500 employees of neighbouring companies will be issued with PingPing tags that they attach to the back of their phones. Companies will be able to credit employees’ PingPing accounts with electronic meal vouchers which their staff can then spend at the Belgacom canteen and also at other restaurants and shops that accept contactless payments.
Supermarket chain Delhaize will add readers to the checkouts at one of its city stores, located near Belgacom’s offices. Trial participants will be able to pay for their shopping using their PingPing account or with electronic Ticket Restaurant vouchers.
Finally, Coca-Cola will add PingPing acceptance to its drinks dispensing machines.
The announcement of the new PingPing brand and the NFC tests follows on from Belgacom’s acquisition last month of a 40% stake in Tunz, a mobile payments specialist which also holds a European e-money license. Tunz offers an open payment platform that supports contactless and NFC payments, national and international person-to-person payments, internet payments, loyalty, couponing and mobile ticketing.
"Belgacom Group considers mobile payments to be an important field in the development of innovative services," says the company. "Together with Tunz and other partners, Belgacom aims to achieve a rapid breakthrough in mobile micro-payments in other fields."
Belgacom already has some significant experience in the mobile payments arena. In cooperation with De Lijn, the Flemish public transport company, Belgacom’s mobile subsidiary Proximus has offered an SMS ticketing service in Antwerp and Ghent since 2007. Today, 1,000 purchases are made every day. And, in July 2008, Belgacom acquired SMS parking ticket payments provider Mobile-for. Two million tickets are expected to be sold this year.
The company also has an involvement in the mobile money transfer market via Belgacom International Carrier Services (Belgacom ICS) which is one of the partners in the GSM Association’s Mobile Money Transfer programme. Belgacom ICS and eServGlobal have recently been testing out their joint HomeSend transfer service using transfers between Belgium and North Africa and are soon to extend testing to other parts of the world.
Contactless Stickers for Cell Phones Move onto Payments Networks
(March 31, 2009) First Data Corp. announced on Tuesday it will use technology from Inside Contactless, a French chipmaker, for its Go-Tag product, a sticker that can be affixed to mobile phones to make them work like contactless-payment devices. Under the three-year agreement, Inside Contactless will supply so-called prelams, or chip-and-antenna elements, that card manufacturers can use to manufacture the stickers for First Data.
Up to now, Go-Tags have been proprietary devices for use in so-called closed-loop networks involving individual merchants, but with Inside Contactless’s technology the product will likely be usable by mid-year on the payWave and PayPass contactless platforms operated by Visa Inc. and MasterCard Inc., pending certification on those systems, according to industry sources. A First Data spokesperson will not comment beyond Tuesday’s announcement concerning the company’s arrangement with Inside Contactless to provide prelams for Go-Tags.
In addition, CPI Card Group, a card manufacturer based in Littleton, Colo., last fall said it expected to ship millions of contactless stickers based on prelams from Inside Contactless (Digital Transactions News, Oct. 15, 2008). CPI’s customers are financial institutions interested in using the stickers to permit contactless transactions on payWave and PayPass. CPI is a manufacturer of Go-Tags, but will not comment on any plans for that product.
First Data’s deal with Inside Contactless follows by one day an announcement by Blaze Mobile Inc., an Alameda, Calif.-based provider of applications for mobile devices, that it is introducing a similar sticker that will work on the PayPass platform. The product works with the Blaze Mobile Wallet, a service the 4-year-old company launched a year ago when it was known as Mobile Candy Dish Inc. (Digital Transactions News, April 10, 2008). The stickers link to prepaid accounts managed by MetaBank, a Storm Lake, Iowa-based unit of Meta Financial Group Inc.
Developments such as these represent what payments experts call a “bridge” to full-fledged mobile payments based on near-field communication (NFC), a technology that works with the operating system of a mobile phone to establish a very short-range, two-way link with other NFC-enabled devices. Such phones can link with contactless readers to allow tap-and-go payments, for example. But NFC development has bogged down in squabbles between mobile carriers and financial institutions over transaction revenues and other issues, and very few handsets equipped with NFC chips have been introduced.
Unlike embedded NFC chips, contactless stickers work like contactless cards, which means they don’t interact with the intelligence built into a mobile device. But they do permit the phone to be used as a payment device and get consumers used to the idea of waving or tapping a handset to make a payment at a point of sale. “It’s pushing for that pattern of behavior,” says Nick Holland, a senior analyst at Aite Group LLC, a Boston-based payments consultancy. “It telegraphs that NFC has become the standard for wireless mobile payment.” Adds a spokesperson for MasterCard, referring to the Blaze Mobile sticker: “This is a solution that gets consumers comfortable paying by phone.”
The announcements by First Data and Blaze Mobile, however, push contactless stickers beyond proprietary applications, where they have mostly been used, onto the networks operated by the world’s largest payments networks. By working with the PayPass platform, for example, the Blaze Mobile sticker can be used at any of the 141,000 merchant locations that are now equipped to accept PayPass cards. “It’s fairly big news,” says Holland. The MasterCard spokesman refuses to reveal how many of these locations are in the U.S., but says the majority of them are.
Still, contactless stickers can be costly. CPI Card Group says the cost will come down as quantity builds, but for now the product is anywhere from 2.5 to three times more expensive than a contactless card. That puts the price to the issuer at around $3 each, compared to a contactless card at $1.10 to $1.20. By contrast, conventional mag-stripe cards cost around 50 cents apiece. Much of the cost stems from the manufacturing process. CPI receives prelams from Inside Contactless but must then drop them onto standard card stock. From there, it prepunches them for personalization and removal for application to a handset.
Also, Holland warns that issuers will have to convince fraud-wary consumers the stickers are safe. “Security is going to be an issue,” he says. “They will have to reassure people this is secure. This is one more form factor you can lose."
