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Square - credit card swiper for cellphones

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Author Topic: Square - credit card swiper for cellphones  (Read 605 times)
Mark
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« on: November 05, 2010, 09:26:49 pm »

Square - credit card swiper for cellphones

http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/ptech/12/09/twitter.dorsey.credit.card/index.html

Quote
Twitter creator reveals Square mobile-pay device

By Barry Neild, CNN
December 9, 2009 6:06 a.m. EST

Paris, France (CNN) -- Twitter creator Jack Dorsey Wednesday gave the first public demonstration of his hotly-anticipated latest venture -- a device to allow credit card payments by cell phone -- and revealed it would be given away for free.

Details of "Square" -- a card reader which plugs into the headphone socket of most mobile devices -- have been circulating on the Internet since it was announced earlier this month, but little has been known about how it works or who it was aimed at.

However, Dorsey -- whose microblogging Web site has proved hugely popular but not hugely profitable since launching in March 2006 -- gave no explanation on how he would make money from his new creation, beyond revealing there would be a per-transaction charity donation.

Square, a tiny cube about an inch in length, contains a magnetic strip reader that allows users to swipe and read credit cards, then deduct payment on or offline through a downloaded application that communicates with card issuers in the same way as retailer devices.

Customers then use their finger on the phone's touch-recognition screen to sign their name to the transaction.

Dorsey, Twitter's co-founder and chairman, says the device, scheduled for launch on iPhones and iPods in March 2010, was inspired partly by the "immediacy, approachability and transparency" of Twitter and by the global economic crisis which has exposed a need for a radical rethink of the financial sector.

"The financial world is amazing right now because there's a clean slate. A lot of these industries are looking for something very small and innovative," he said during the gremlin-hit demonstration of his device at LeWeb, a major Internet forum in Paris.

"My co-founder is a glass artist. He sells things that people don't need -- $2,000 glass faucets. They're beautiful. If he could not take credit cards, he wouldn't make the sale because no one carries around $2,000 in the cash.

"So we looked at it. Ninety percent of the U.S. has moved to credit cards, but it's still very difficult to accept them."

Dorsey said he considered a number of options in developing Square, including using cell phone cameras and character recognition software to read images of the credit card.

"The other thing we looked at is the audio jack -- and it's on Macbooks, desktop PCs, BlackBerries and Androids. We built this hardware. It's a self-powered swiper. Powered by the magnetic power of the swipe itself, converts it to an audio signal, which the software interprets."

Dorsey, who joked he had pocketed $650 by allowing potential business partners to road test the device with their own credit cards, said Square was currently being beta tested in a handful of major U.S. cities by a cross-section of small business users.

"We're trying with a bunch of different profiles of folks in New York, San Francisco, LA and St. Louis, Missouri. There are piano teachers, flight instructors, and coffee shops. It can be used in a retail store like Apple, all the way down to Craigslist or paying me back for that dinner you owe me."

Dorsey said his developers were still working to ensure the device was fraud proof.
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Kilika
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« Reply #1 on: November 06, 2010, 04:02:21 am »

Seems I remember seeing a Sprint commercial that has/had a card swiper phone.

From what they say in the article, it sounds like the phone would be a biometric thumbprint reader also, to verify the user of the phone. Security-wise, it makes sense. Of course we all know what this leads to. What is interesting though is the mention at the end of the article about what type payments could bemade with the device...

Quote
It can be used in a retail store like Apple, all the way down to Craigslist or paying me back for that dinner you owe me."

Hmm, sounds like a reasonable feature? I can see people will jump all over this one. Digital exchange of money/credits between individuals. All this sounds like a description of the latest RPG video game. How they plan to implement the exchange between people I suspect will initially involve people having some kind of online pay system account like PayPal, etc and micro transactions like in gaming. A simple debit card account could be the source account instead of your personal banking account. Swipe your pre-paid credit/debit card, a window pops up, info entered, done. You just swapped absolutely nothing but bits of digital information, and had to pay to do it. Interesting business model! Add a simple language/currency exchange app, and your global. So what's left? Where does this technology go from there? Mandates.

The hardware is in place. The system has been up and running. And they have just scratched the surface on how to incorporate a universal digital identity via "social networking". The world has been in a beta test, only this test isn't a test in the sense it may have problems and they may scrap it. No, it's just part of implementation. God says it will happen, and so it is, so they will continue with this move in technology, regardless of "test results".

Side note:

I find the sudden rise of Twitter as being curious. This company has become a multi-billion dollar fixture of social interaction almost overnight. And now it's getting into the online transaction business? Imagine a small piece of every financial transaction of their members, or members of Facebook? BILLIONS.

"...love of money..."
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