On this Online Payments
site: https://www.angelfire.com/space/special4u/payonline.html
As mentioned on: normal speed SPECIAL 4u High Speed SPECIAL 4u
By Pierre
Andre THIBAULT, in Copenhagen, Denmark, July
2004,
with Copyrights for the reproduced articles as mentioned below:
On Yahoo News Jul 21, 2004, from AP Associated Press.
By YURI KAGEYAMA, AP Business Writer
TOKYO - As it is, you don't leave home without it. In
a world of cashless payment, why not simply make your cell phone a wallet?
Japan has long been phasing out the hassle of coins and bills with
microchip-laden "smart cards," which let people make electronic
payments for everything from lunch to the daily commute.
But even smart cards could be on their way out, their
plastic presence overtaken by virtual-wallet technology now available in the
everyday cell phone.
Other nations, led by South Korea (news - web sites), already have so-called mobile commerce
payment schemes in place that let people punch keys on their cell phones so
that the devices trigger transactions.
But a series of phones going on sale this summer in
Japan, for use on NTT DoCoMo (news - web sites)'s wireless network, are the world's
first with an embedded computer chip that you can fill up with electronic cash.
The wireless company loaned me a P506iC handset from
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. and I was in business. Well, almost.
First I had to find a machine that's used to stoke
smart cards with cash. They can be found in some convenience stores and offices
in Japan. You place the phone in a special slot and slip bills into the
machine. The phones have a 50,000-yen ($450) limit.
Now you can spend.
To pay you simply wave your cell phone within a few
inches of a special display found in stores, restaurants and vending machines
around Japan. A fairy-like tinkling sound means your purchase is being deducted
from the embedded chip using radio-frequency ID technology.
It's instantaneous.
Unlike infrared or other mobile payment schemes that
require clicks on the handset, you don't even need to open your
clamshell-shaped phone, the style of choice here.
It's rather fun to pay for things this way.
It's also an idea that makes sense, given that almost
every Japanese has a cell phone and relies on it so much that being stranded in
the street without one almost causes panic. There are 81.5 million cell phones
in this nation of 127 million people.
For the wallet phone tech to really take off, stores,
theaters and restaurants that accept electronic payments need to become more
widespread. They total around 9,000 in Japan so far, and the number is quickly
growing.
To buy a diet Pepsi from a vending machine, I pushed
an "electronic payment" button on the machine and pushed another
button to pick the soda. When a display the size of a small greeting card lit
up with the price, I put my phone next to the display.
Shazaam. The soda pop rolled out, and the display
blinked with the amount of money left in the phone.
To pay for my fried-rice lunch at a restaurant in our
office building, I brought my bill to the register and told the clerk I wanted
to pay electronically. When he rang it up, the little display lit up with the
price. I just flashed my phone.
I also played Virtua Fighter arcade games at one of
the two Sega amusement centers in Japan where the phone payments work. And I
bought gum and bottled tea at a convenience store with the phone.
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Like millions of other Japanese, I have a few smart
cards. One, the Suica, works as my commuter train pass. The other, an Edy card,
works as a wallet at some stores and its "cash" machines are the ones
NTT DoCoMo uses for its phones.
I carry my Suica practically every day. But I don't
always remember my Edy. So the P506iC wallet phone was handy, indeed. After
all, what reporter is without a cell phone these days?
Computer experts have suggested that hackers could
develop a way to pickpocket cell phone wallets merely by getting close to
people's handsets. That hasn't happened — yet.
Another concern is that a telecom company — or a
government — could find out too much about your spending proclivities and your
physical movements. But other features on Japan's richly endowed cell phones
offer marketers plenty of information on consuming habits as it is: Almost all
phones have e-mail and Internet connections for restaurant searches, ringtone
downloads, news and weather.
One Japanese airline lets passengers use the wallet
phone to speed up check-ins at airports and next year you'll be able to use the
phones to begin paying for train rides and video rentals.
Later this year, Japanese credit-card company JCB
Corp. plans to offer a service that will let corporate clients use
chip-embedded phones as electronic keys to get into office buildings.
And if you lose your wallet phone?
Well, DoCoMo can lock it. Which means no one else can
use it for calls. And no one else would be able to add more money to the
cash-dispensing chip.
But whatever money is stored on the phone is like a
virtual wad of cash. The clerk at the DoCoMo store repeatedly told me not to
put any more money into the phone than I could afford to lose.
Read on “4m-sales, new prospective marketing schemes” about the MAGIC WATCH,
all-in-one hands-free ”radio-TV-video-cam-DVD-computer-internet-phone”
project, where any chosen online payment system
can be operated through the internet connection.
( read the web article on: https://www.angelfire.com/space/special4u/4msales.html
)
For more about the Magic Watch design, and only if you are an electronic component or
product maker established company, send an email with your reference and query
to: pierretours@yahoo.com or pierre.andre@www.com
http://www.transaction.net/payment
http://www.auctionclinic.com/online_payment_site_reviews.htm
http://www.mouthshut.com/readproduct/925022499-1.html
http://www.gambling-guru.com/payments_reviews.php
http://www.getpaidtobeonline.net/GetPaidOnline/OnlinePaymentServices.html
http://www.active-income.com/paysys.htm
http://www.link-mail.com/20501.html
http://www.best-web-site-design.co.uk/pay-per-click.html
http://www.iwantmyownsite.co.uk/links/pay_per_click_advertising_networks.php3
http://www.marketingterms.com/dictionary/cost_per_click
http://www.uzdarbis.com/payperclick.html
http://www.transaction.net/payment/micro.html
http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/yiannis/papers/micro-ecash.ppt (advanced)
Micro and Anonymous Cash
Payments
http://www.transaction.net/payment/anon.html
http://jya.com/nsamint.htm (advanced)
http://www.hosts4porn.com/profiles/netbilling.cfm
http://www.pornwatch.net/res/payment.shtml
For sending quickly
small amounts of money,
we suggested using
any money transfer company, or mail-post office services
similar to those of
for example:
Western Union at http://www.westernunion.com
You can send as much money as
you want, although certain security compliance requirements
must be met for amounts
exceeding the equivalent of $ 3 000.
For your payments
to Special ads 4u send first an email to:
pierretours@yahoo.com or pierre.andre@www.com
and tell the online
or other payment way, method, or system that suits you best.
For your money
offshore, or for large size payments:
Gibraltar,
Swiss bank accounts, Campione d’Italia,
San Marino and more…
but
? ask the MPS, a bank established 1472 ! or the DnB
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2004. All rights reserved.
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