Cash still most popular method in Canada, but for how long?
Cash and other paper-based transactions are still the most popular way of paying Canada, a new Canadian Payment Methods and Trends (CPMT) report has found. But for how long?
Cash and other paper-based transactions are still the most popular way of paying Canada, a new Canadian Payment Methods and Trends (CPMT) report has found. But for how long?
If there is one metric that can be used to most clearly present the rising success of contactless payments, it would be monthly spend. New research from the UK Card Association shows that monthly contactless card spending has passed the £2 billion mark in July.
The contactless technology momentum doesn't only apply to the ever increasing spending as new research from analyst firm Berg Insight predicts that nearly 80% of the world's POS terminals will be contactless within the next four years.
Citibank has introduced Apple's authentication software, Touch ID, in Hong Kong, allowing for features such as transactions, investments and enquiry to be conducted across iPhone models 5S or later.
Millennials aren't chomping at the bit to adopt the newest payment methods just yet, new research suggests. Instead they are biding their time, using traditional payments while waiting for advancements in the market.
The need for speed during a dining experience is becoming more and more important to the modern-day diner, as half of customers feel frustrated when it takes too long to pay the bill, according to new research from Barclaycard.
Asda looked to have a particularly bad Halloween weekend as a glitch caused card machines in its stores up and down the country to break down.
Samsung Pay is expanding into three new countries including Russia, and has partnered with Mastercard to introduce online payments.
Ingenico has developed a new solution that speeds up payments made on mobile devices by using their NFC technology to read cards' chips and auto-fill payment information on the payment page.
Britons are now carrying less than £5 in their wallets as newer payment methods such as contactless cards and smartphones become more and more popular, new research finds.
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