Apple Hints At Near-Field Payments System In Next-Gen iPhone, iPad 164
An anonymous reader writes "The smartphone seems to be well on its way to becoming the next wallet; and Apple could be pushing that movement along. Reports from several outlets suggest the Cupertino, Calif.-based electronics giant has plans to put a near-field communications chip in the next versions of the iPhone and iPad for contactless payments technology. The latest report, from blog Apple Insider, says Apple has put up two job postings for two global payment platforms managers."
TFSite (Score:5, Informative)
The site is incredibly obnoxious. Ads pop up over the content from time to time. Avoid if possible. Hope someone can find an article on this on another site.
Can the chip be removed or disabled? (Score:2)
I do NOT want anything like this capability on my phone that I carry everywhere....
I'm trying to go more cash as it is...keep CC spending down...and really, one good hack on this thing, or a stolen phone...how much money could you potentially lose if this thing acts like a debit card and takes it straight out of your checking??? I don't have a debit card for reasons like that....that your funds are gone, and don't
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Why not wait and see how it's implemented before judging it?
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Why not wait till this is fully rolled out in plastic form, before putting it in a smartphone.
Way too late for that.
NFC and phone based payments have been huge in Japan for many years. Plastic does not let you password protect it. (Pin on the terminal maybe, but not passwords).
With NFC you will have the ability to pay with your choice of cards, or pay anonymously with only Google or Apple knowing the actual account. And your data can be heavily encrypted on your device.
It can unlock your car, or your house if you want it to.
But best of all, it shuts off when you want it to. The plastic versions
Re:Can the chip be removed or disabled? (Score:4, Insightful)
.can this chip be disabled, or even better, removed or not added as an option?
Yes don't buy an iphone etc...
I'm trying to go more cash as it is...keep CC spending down..
and you wonder why they are doing this?
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Re:Can the chip be removed or disabled? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sorry, its too late tow worry about it being only an Apple thing.
The Nexus S phone [google.com] already has NFC already. Apple is definitely behind on NFC. Google already has a processing consortium set up with Barclay's and credit card clearing houses to handle the payments.
You can always turn it off and carry your less secure credit cards, or vastly less secure cash.
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Re:Can the chip be removed or disabled? (Score:4, Informative)
Less secure? Neither cash nor credit cards can be scanned without removing them from my pocket.
Both can be removed from your pocket. Once removed, cash is 100% insecure, and credit cards can be easily used until fraud/theft is discovered and the card is disabled.
And neither of them can be hacked into without my knowledge.
Cash has no need to be hacked (though it actually can, and sometimes is). And every time you hand over your credit card, you open it up to exploit.
Sure I still have to look out for skimmers and be mindful who I allow to handle them, but all in all they're a lot more secure than NFC is. Remember NFC is just an extension to RFID which is known to be riddled with security problems.
Such as? It uses public key encryption. You can't just "clone" someone's NFC phone, and start making purchases. As a phone owner, you can enable further security mechanisms, which make it far more secure than either cash or traditional credit cards.
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As for that last point, the British passports were cracked within the initial 12 hours of being released, that's hardly what I would call secure. What was brilliant about it was that they didn't even have to open the envelopes. Sure you can enable the security mechanisms, but if the phone gets cracked you're pretty much screwed
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You're confusing insured with secure.
No, I'm not referring to any insurance offered by the financial institutions with regards to fraud.
Cash is secure so long as it is in your pocket.
That's a tautology. "Cash is secure so long as it's some place that is secure." Also, it assumes your pocket is secure, and additionally assumes you can't turn off NFC (thus making it 100% secure, and allowing for a similar tautology, "NFC is secure so long as you turn it off", although my point is that it's sufficiently secure without resorting to such measures).
But anything RFID isn't secure in your pocket unless you go to specific measures to secure it.
RFID is secured by encryption. Someone can pote
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And with many credit cards you get rfid whether you want it or not. And it can be scanned without you taking it out of your pocket from at least ten feet away.
Unlike rfid, NFC is an active component which can be turned off when not in use.
Both rfid and nfc can be canceled should they fall into the wrong hands. Try that when you get mugged for your cash.
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With cash you know when somebody is taking it and can t
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FUD again.
The NFC capability in the phone is backed up by a credit card. The credit card can be canceled.
The phone should be secured, and have remote wipe software installed (this stuff is free). Borrow a phone, remotely lock your phone, then call your bank.
Cash gone? Call a cop. Good luck with that.
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But if it ends up being like other advancements such as those stupid soft keyboards on smart phones it gets harder and harder to find something decent that doesn't have one.
And that was precisely the reason my daughter chose the HTC Desire Z instead of the HTC Desire HD as her birthday present a couple of months ago. They cost much the same, but the Z has a flip-out hardware keyboard, while the HD has a slightly larger screen. The keyboard was an absolute requirement for her, easily outweighing the HD's larger screeen (same number of pixels) and camera with a higher pixel count.
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From what I heard it's for small transactions; like convenience stores, lunch outings, vending machines, etc. A limit of $50 a day or such. You can't buy a car with it.
The NFP chip needs to be less then 4 inches from the scanning device to work; if it uses a 2-way key encryption (layered with session encryption), so it would be difficult for a 3rd party device to snoop anything useful.
It may prompt your *phone* t
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From what I heard it's for small transactions; like convenience stores, lunch outings, vending machines, etc. A limit of $50 a day or such. You can't buy a car with it.
The NFP chip needs to be less then 4 inches from the scanning device to work; if it uses a 2-way key encryption (layered with session encryption), so it would be difficult for a 3rd party device to snoop anything useful."
Ok, thanks..didn't realize t
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They require a card, but the card that can be an iTunes gift card, which you can get for cash at a number of locations.
The recent Amazon password debacle leads one to conclude it would be a good policy to use the gift cards even if you plan on buying a lot of music and apps from them.
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They require a card, but the card that can be an iTunes gift card, which you can get for cash at a number of locations.
Eh? How can you say something like this? Apple hasn't even announced anything, all we know is that Apple wants to hire engineers with experience in NFC. They may not even want to use it for payment, but for something else entirely. And even if this is about payment, why would it have to be coupled with Apple's payment account?
Or perhaps Apple is only hiring these people to catch up with other phones in the Japanese market. NFC phones are so popular in Japan that vendors of current iPhones sometimes put a s
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It WILL do that. Stop spreading FUD.
There is a limit (user settable) on the size of transaction you allow, and per-day limits without the use of some form of approval. (This is already widely deployed in Japan and has been since before smartphones).
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I'm trying to go more cash as it is...keep CC spending down...and really, one good hack on this thing, or a stolen phone...how much money could you potentially lose if this thing acts like a debit card and takes it straight out of your checking???
Typically these schemes require the user to actively transfer money to a contact-less payment card, either manually or by direct debit, so they are a true equivalent to cash and do not threaten your main bank balance. See for example how the Oyster travel card scheme works in London. So it would just be like withdrawing 20 credits from a bank machine with your debit card, then using it to buy something. If they allowed access to all the funds in your account (or even a set amount per day), that would be ins
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Re:TFSite (Score:4, Funny)
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Not only that, but they are blatantly copying Google and Android. This is absolutely not a case of Apple paving a path but rather one of Apple falling in behind. But regardless, who gives a crap. I sure don't want my wallet to be so easily lost or worse, susceptible to viruses, trojans, and the usual application exploit crap.
Personally I think its a really dumb idea. Seemingly, the only real benefit is to allow Google, and now Apple, to know exactly where you shop and which products you purchase. Is carryin
Re:TFSite (Score:5, Insightful)
I installed adblock but then extricated it again, because I felt guilty. Ads are what pay for my free internet, free movies/dramas (TV), and free music (radio). I'd sooner deal with them than deal with a monthly subscription.
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You're very odd.
Re:TFSite (Score:4, Insightful)
Not odd. Honest.
Re:TFSite (Score:5, Insightful)
Not odd. Honest.
Which IS odd these days!
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Honest how? More like naive.
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>>>Not odd. Honest.
And cheap. I don't want to see websites or radio or TV turn into a pay-for-access medium, because everyone is using ad-blocker and advertisers stop buying airtime.
I would pay good money for a service without advertisements, if such a thing were possible.
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>>>I would pay good money for a service without advertisements, if such a thing were possible.
Satellite radio is advertisement free, and only costs $7 a month (Sirius XM), but I'd still rather not have that bill. I'll put-up with the ads if I can get my radio for free.
Likewise I get my TV for free rather than pay ~$70 a month and of course website access is free too. I refuse to join subscription sites.
Re:TFSite (Score:5, Insightful)
I installed adblock but then extricated it again, because I felt guilty. Ads are what pay for my free internet, free movies/dramas (TV), and free music (radio). I'd sooner deal with them than deal with a monthly subscription.
I understand and share your dilemma. What I decided to do was install AdBlock, but not subscribe to any of the filter sets. When I come across obnoxious ads, I define a filter rule to block ads from that source.
It took a little while, but generally I don't see the obnoxious ads anymore. The ones that aren't obnoxious don't bother me - I glance at them, then go on with my reading.
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I installed adblock but then extricated it again, because I felt guilty. Ads are what pay for my free internet, free movies/dramas (TV), and free music (radio). I'd sooner deal with them than deal with a monthly subscription.
Thank you! Your watching of annoying ads is what gets me free access to internet sites without viewing the ads. If it wasn't for the nice folks like you, those sites would either shutdown or paywall themselves. So, here's to you and others like you who view ads for me. Please know that you are much appreciated for this.
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You're either an idiot or a troll. My guess is the latter - nobody with half a brain likes to waste time watching ads or searching for content on a webpage that's obstructed by Flash ads.
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>>>nobody with half a brain likes to waste time watching ads
I do. I watch the ads on syfy.com (or more likely switch tabs for a quick 1 minute perusal of cnn.com), and in exchange I get free fantasy shows. I think it's a good deal for me. - Certainly better than handing-over almost $1000 a year to get Syfy via comsucks.
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See, I don't feel any more guilty than I might if I ride the bus and ignore the ads, or go to a pub and ignore the ads above the urinal. Ads are not a good revenue mod del for a web site, and I prefer to look at them as an annoyance which gives tips to a site, but not the main rvenue chain itself.
Guilt for ad-blocking. What's next, guilt for leaving the room and getting a snack when a commercial appears on TV?
different article (Score:5, Informative)
I'll bite (Score:4, Interesting)
Why do I want this? I'm more than willing to get a piece of plastic out of my wallet or on my keychain to pay for something. I can't wait for the hack that lets people walk by you and get you to pay for things. It's bad enough credit cards have RFID tags in them now. I don't need my phone doing it too.
Re:I'll bite (Score:5, Interesting)
It's bad enough credit cards have RFID tags in them now. I don't need my phone doing it too.
I disagree, although I think we share some common ground. I just received my first credit card with an RFID embedded. I don't like it because in order to "turn it off" I have to wrap it in tinfoil. Thus, I do want NFP. With my phone, I can actually run an app and (assuming a reasonable interface) only turn on its ability to do payments when I want to use it. It removes a security risk (or at least changes it from a risk from anyone who is near me to a risk from anyone who can remotely hack into my device and extract and decrypt info.
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Why do I want this? I'm more than willing to get a piece of plastic out of my wallet or on my keychain to pay for something. I can't wait for the hack that lets people walk by you and get you to pay for things. It's bad enough credit cards have RFID tags in them now. I don't need my phone doing it too.
Convenience would be the only attractor. The security issues are a non-issue because the banks will be responsible just like with credit cards, not the card carrier. At this time, I think that my wallet is more convenient because I have to have it with me. Drivers license, insurance cards, etc. I don't have to have my phone with me, and I would rather not be forced to carry both a wallet and a cell phone in order to go about my day to day business. Put all of my IDs on the phone, and I'm OK with it.
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an ATM saves a lot of time standing at a slow moving bank teller line.
However NFC chips don't actually save time. If you stop watch an NFC swipe versus a CC swipe you would realize your still waiting for the cashier(yes even the robotic ones) more than the transaction.
I have an RFID credit card, that I use occasionally. I have been randomly testing to see which is actually easier. In the end I might as well swipe the card as I still have to sign the receipt anyways,unless the company you are purchasing f
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However NFC chips don't actually save time. If you stop watch an NFC swipe versus a CC swipe you would realize your still waiting for the cashier(yes even the robotic ones) more than the transaction.
Most countries outside the USA require some form of verification on a credit card. Last century it was a signature, which was checked against the card. In the modern age it's a pin number, which is theoretically more secure (but is almost as flawed as the u.s. signature method)
NFC, at least in the UK, is used fo
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That's just it It isn't faster
The speed of the transaction is limited to the speed of the connection between reader/credit Processor
My debit card transactions are just as fast as your NFC transactions because it only takes three seconds to swipe and enter the pin, as opposed to one second for a swipe. your still waiting 15-20 seconds for the credit processor and printer to finish up the transaction anyways.
In the USA most retailers have an agreement with the credit card companies that purchases under $30 d
Why all the fuss (Score:5, Informative)
I've seen a lot of stories pop up around this, but I'm not quite sure why - for one thing, doesn't the most recent Google Android phone already include an NFC chip and support in the OS? So it's not like Apple is the first here, they haven't even confirmed they are doing it!
Also, in more general terms, I don't know why people get freaked out about this. It's just another way to pay for things.
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Android phone has NFC equipment: Yay! Huzzah! That is the way of the future.
Apple device has NFC equipment: Boo! Hiss! Mark of the Beast. Evil conspiracy!
That's why they needed this article.
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I don't know why people get freaked out about this. It's just another way to pay for things.
It's just another thing for people to hack. It's bad enough that Apple stores most of my credit card number on my Iphone.
Your CC is NOT in your iPhone (Score:2)
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Why the hell would a music player keep track of my credit card information? Apple and their goddamned misnomers.
Why the hell would somebody not be able to tell the difference between a "music player" and an "account"? Apple haters and their goddamned lack of a brain.
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It's just another way for companies to empty your bank account quickly.
FTFY. Our debt/credit obsessed society has nearly driven everyone into the ground, and many have been ground with the loss of their homes.
Contactless payment is a BAD thing.
Usability... (Score:3)
The Japanese have been using NFC for many years now, yes... but I can't imagine how a technology that you simply hold near something to be read, becomes more usable.
I think it just means the U.S. will finally catch up to Europe in ease of payment, I always feel sorry for cashiers overseas when I have to present my ancient mag-stripe tech for payment instead of even chip & PIN.....
it's important to make it as easy as possible... (Score:3)
...to take your money. That is all.
Taxation Without Representation (Score:3)
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Your dollar bill is legal tender for all debts, public and private. Not all sales, all debts.
Handling cash isn't free, either. My local economists note that handling pennies alone costs the US economy half a billion dollars a year (they're kind of bulky obnoxious coins that you need to keep around to give as change, but no one will come back with them to replenish your stock). And if you have a big enough business that you need large numbers of bills and coins you're not just dealing with a bank; you're
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All he's really saying is wouldn't it be nice if the government would issue something besides these 23 ton stone carvings as currency? We're tired of having to hire movers just to pay the gas bill! Something a bit more convenient for modern use like an electronic system perhaps?
Your dollar bill is legal tender for all debts, public and private. Not all sales, all debts.
And that is relevant how? That just means that I don't HAVE to accept cash for a sale. (mostly based on the fact that I am free to decline to sell at all if I like). It has no relevance to the question of government backed legal tend
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That depends on how it's set up. I paid my rent at the beginning of the month for the time I was about to spend in the apartment. They didn't render the service before the money was paid, so it wasn't a debt.
If you pay at the end of the month, your contract might stipulate that you can't use cash. Ultimately, you still can repay your debt with cash, but they could probably also have you evicted for violating the terms of your rental agreement.
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Your question has been a big elephant in the room for a while, and extends well beyond just electronic payment. For example, consider how many people are forced to pay a 3% or more "payroll tax" to a check casher. It's the usual economic perversity that it only affects people who don't have much money to begin with. When you 'graduate' up from that, it's a choice of which financial institution you would like to let skim some money off of you as service charges. They cost you less than the check casher becau
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In other words, as I said, the people who don't have much to begin with.
Since when do people who actually manage their finances pay service charges?
As soon as something happens beyond their control. Then the bank dogpiles on.
Re:Taxation Without Representation (Score:5, Informative)
Co-opting historically patriotic catchphrases does not prove your point, it only underlines your lack of understanding about free economy and government. The fact that you dont like paying surcharges does not make this a constitutional matter.
Paypal is a value-added service (many would argue against this, though), and it costs money to run it. If you dont like it, mail a check, or fly over to sweden or wherever wikileaks is now and pay them cash. By the way, checks cost you money. As do plane tickets. And ATM charges.
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A business has to bear its own cost of doing its own business, ie maintaining its cash reserves, by deposit envelope, or armoured car. That is the business' own problem, not society's.
That is different than a person who has a requirement in today's society to transact in cash to service their daily needs. It is the profiteering off these daily monetary transactions by these "meta businesses" that are vampiric and it then becomes political. The surcharges are essentially unavoi
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For starters- the cost of doing business is calculated and accounted for in all successful business models. Cashiers (like in the grocery store) are paid to handle cash transactions. Companies all over the country are paid to secure cash and transport it from place to place. This affects the prices that you pay for things in cash, although it is not always immediately apparent. These costs a
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Anyways, where does it say that a citizen need buy stock to exercise democratic rights? If a country does not have control of its currency, its not very sovereign is it? To quote: " Sure as hell ain't a Democracy".
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Unless you're arguing the federal reserve as a non-American agent to take away sovereignty; nobody took control of , or replaced, the currency. Apple is using the currency of our country in accordance with he laws that govern them. They have in no way taken over cu
Steve Jobs (Score:5, Funny)
First Steve Jobs invents the computer. Then he invents the GUI. Then he invents the MP3 player. Then he invent the cell phone. Then he invents the tablet computer. Now he invents NFC. The man is single-handedly inventing everything!
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cost? (Score:5, Interesting)
My carrier recently rolled out a phone based payment system, I was asked to be part of the trial. I declined.
They want me to spend $1.50 per transaction to use it. I can use my debit card for free, I can use cash for free, and my visa card actually pays me to use it, why on earth would I want to give my carrier $1.50 for each transaction? I don't pay bank fees, they already get the privilege of using my money while it's in their care, I refuse to pay money to get access to it.
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If the cost to me of using cash is the same as using debit, then the debit card is essentially "free", my visa card gives me cash back on purchases, so it is in effect cheaper for me to use than cash. the hidden costs are irrelevant if there is no way to avoid them. Paying an extra $1.50 per transaction is significantly more expensive than cash, and can easily be avoided by using cash/debit/credit, so why would I pay it?
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It may be that your role in the carrier's trial was to find out the price that the market would bear for this service.
Apple as a bank (Score:5, Interesting)
"Near-field" isn't the issue. It's that Apple wants to be a payment processor, handling payments through iTunes and skimming off part of the transaction.
We need a crackdown on payment systems run by non-banks. PayPal is generally agreed to be terrible at handling problems and acts irresponsibly with the money of others. Most of PayPal's competitors are worse. Payment systems need to be run only by companies subject to regulation as banks.
Re:Apple as a bank (Score:5, Funny)
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Cause banks have a long history of honesty and stability!
By comparison with organizations handling payments that aren't banks? Yes. Alas.
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There should be regulation of any payment processor, but not necessarily the same as the banks.
Further, there should be oversight and an ombudsman for the (almost) inevitable "He took my cash by walking past me!" exploit.
Evolution of the driveby attack (Score:2)
Digital pocket picking (Score:2)
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Yup, I'm sure they'll set it up so that Joe Random can just walk by and charge you a thousand dollars without you knowing it.
After all, that's just the way Bluetooth pairing works. Isn't it?
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Yeah, I'm really glad there were never any known bluetooth hacks. That was a really secure protocol.
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There were a few. Really widespread. I'm afraid to walk around with a Bluetooth device. Why, you just turn one on and all of a sudden people are connecting to it all over the place.
Oh wait, no they're not.
Any NFC phone will of course ask you for confirmation before completing a payment. The protocol itself might be more or less secure, but it's no more or less problematic than a debit or credit card.
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"Do you want to purchase this?"
[Purchase] [Do Not Purchase]
Followed by a whitelist of vendors so you wouldn't have to confirm if you didn't want to. Use some hefty encryption to make spoofing a legit vendor (or specific terminal of a vendor) more trouble than it's worth. Have the whitelist also be optional.
Also have the NFP chip only power up if the phone is being held, in the same way the screen turns off due to the proximity sensor if it's by your head, set up a couple to detect when the phone is in your
OT: Incorrect use of "near-field" (Score:3)
OK, this is going to a bit of a rant. As an electrical engineer, I object to the use of "near-field" to describe this nascent technology. To an antenna engineer, near-field means something very specific, relating to the size of the antenna and the wavelength of the waves with which it operates, and generally describing other aspects of the situation as amount of wavefront curvature and the phase relationships between certain fields.
But I will concede the argument because I have lost every other attempt to avoid the subversion of technical terms by non-technical people.
Any communication engineer knows the difference between bandwidth, channel capacity, and data rate and their relationship to signal-to-noise ratio. Yet the "technical" press has conflated these concepts into one, or rather, use "bandwidth" to mean usually either channel capacity or instantaneous data rate. I once attempted to repair the Wikipedia page on Bandwidth by allowing that there are two definitions, one of which is the "new-age" version and one of which recognizes the work of Claude Shannon; my edits were quickly reversed to include only the "new-age" definition, or, as the other editors called it, the "computer science" version.
In the early 1980s, I wrote a letter to each of the three popular audio magazines of the day begging them to stop using "software" to refer to the information stored on Compact Discs which is properly called "data" or "information" or the like. I included dictionary definitions to bolster my argument. I received a polite reply from two of the three editors saying that they agreed with me but that it was too late--that train had already sailed. Oddly, nowadays that particular misuse has partially been corrected as people have come to realize that software is the stuff that makes their computers operate, while the stuff on CDs (and other media) is frequently referred to as "content."
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In this case it is not the media or other non-technical group that is responsible for the term, it is the ISO and other related organizations which have given it this name.
Perhaps you can go into a bit of detail how this is not "near field"?
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No dice. You are much more likely to get an NFC enabled microSD card [tyfone.com] than a new phone from your bank.
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Apple is not the leader in this technology. Google is. Google's NFC phone is already out. Apple's is just hinted at.
Better minds than Apple have been working on this for years. Its been deployed widely in Japan for many years now.
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Apple is not the leader in this technology. Google is. Google's NFC phone is already out. Apple's is just hinted ad.
Google isn't the leader in this, this has been around for many years now. You're making two mistakes here.
1. That anyone is claiming Apple is the first to do something. They are just saying that Apple is doing something.
2. That Apple doing something and Google/Android doing something are of equal interest to consumers. Far more people are interested in the next iPhone than they are in the next six dozen Android phones.
Better minds than Apple have been working on this for years.
Apple has the best minds in the industry. I don't mean that Apple has every smartest perso
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You fanboi is getting in the way of the facts.
Android is outselling iphone everywhere.
The iPhone 5 will be obsolete upon release.
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You fanboi is getting in the way of the facts.
Android is outselling iphone everywhere.
iOS is outselling Android everywhere. And more to the point, even if Android handsets are outselling iPhone handsets, it's not by much, and consumer interest is still much higher in iPhone than it is in Android.
The iPhone 5 will be obsolete upon release.
Who's the fanboi again? iPhone 4 is extremely successful. Apple is now the number 5 mobile phone manufacturer by units sold (and that includes non-smartphones), is the number 1 mobile phone manufacturer by profits. It takes an extremely warped view of reality to think iPhone 5 bill be obsolete.
Verizo
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The sort of geeks that value Android highly over iPhone are an extremely insignificant portion of the smartphone market.
Geeks, is that what you are going with?
You said yourself that Android phones are outselling iphones.
So if android only appeals to a insignificant portion of the smartphone market, AND it is outselling iphone, then by your OWN reasoning iphone is an even more insignificant part of the smartphone market.
Seriously, do you even read what you post?
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The sort of geeks that value Android highly over iPhone are an extremely insignificant portion of the smartphone market.
Geeks, is that what you are going with?
Yes. Geeks are the only ones that really care about the App Store lock in, Open Source, and multiple hardware vendors. Pretty much anything that Android has over iOS are things that are only appealing to geeks. Normal people either don't give a shit, or actually prefer Apple's way.
You said yourself that Android phones are outselling iphones.
No, I didn't. Android is not outselling iOS. It *might* be outselling iPhone. Apple reports their numbers, Google does not.
So if android only appeals to a insignificant portion of the smartphone market, AND it is outselling iphone, then by your OWN reasoning iphone is an even more insignificant part of the smartphone market.
Your logic is flawed. iPhone is far more interesting (I never said "appeals") to far more people than Andro
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Normal people either don't give a shit, or actually prefer Apple's way.
Yeah only weird people buy android phones all the cool normal people buy apple.
What's the purpose of this straw man? I never said anything like that at all.
Its because android is a lowest common denominator (all other phones can be broken down in to groups of multiple android phones) but apple is built for the elite so its the absolute highest denominator.
I said Android is lowest common denominator, I never said anything silly like "Apple is built for the elite" or that it's the "absolute highest denominator".
Besides who needs a phone with all the freedom of android
Most people really, truly, just don't give a shit about the small amount of additional freedom offered by Android.
i'm perfectly happy restricted to only what Steve jobs wants.
Another straw man. iPhone doesn't restrict you to "only what Steve Jobs wants". Contrary to popular (around here) belief, iPhone users don't receive orders from Job
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Technically, NFC is a requirement to sell any meaningful numbers in Japan and a couple of other Asian countries. It's been cited as the main reason of apple's utter failure in Japan for example (in addition to a couple of other usability features that are essentially mandatory on a phone to sell to anyone outside apple fan crowd in there).
Finally, the problem with NFC adaptation has exactly ZERO to do with phone makers. Nokia, with their ~40% worldwide market share two years ago drove really hard to get NFC
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No sane person thinks that Apple invents a lot but they do refine things and do it better than others in most instances.
That's your answer right there.
Apple wants businesses to use them. (Score:2)
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Because the phones that currently include NFC are either only available in Japan or form a tiny portion of the market, and you can't actually use it for much anyway?
Apple including it in the new iPhone would mean that there would be tens of millions of the things around, and Apple isn't known for including features in their devices that you can't use.