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Businesses The Almighty Buck

Samsung Pay Could Come To More Non-Premium Smartphones (cnet.com) 24

Gordon Gottsegen, writing for CNET: Samsung Pay could end up on even more devices, starting with the Galaxy J series phones in India, Mashable reports. Samsung Pay lets you save credit cards, gift cards, and other payment methods onto your smartphone and then use it when paying. Your phone mimics your cards right down to the magnetic signal, so it works in most places that accept credit cards thanks to Magnetic Secure Transmission (MST) and Near Field Communication (NFC). Just tap your device against the payment terminal and you're generally good to go. But only if you've owned a premium smartphone. Samsung Pay generally only features in pricier phones like the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy s7 Edge, though it has also come to the Galaxy A line and Samsung Gear S watches. Now, according to Mashable's sources, Samsung has quietly been adding the technology to cheaper phones too, and plans to experiment with the idea in India -- where Samsung Pay recently launched -- in the next few months. Makes perfect sense. In places such as India, the vast majority of card terminals (PoS) don't support NFC, and it is very difficult to convince a merchant to upgrade their terminals. There are two reasons for this: first, not a lot of payments services require NFC. For all they care, their existing PoS devices support credit cards and debit cards. Second is, payment terminals with NFC are expensive. Also, smart of Samsung to trickle this feature into its lower-end smartphones.
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Samsung Pay Could Come To More Non-Premium Smartphones

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I heard Samsung's CEO is in jail for "Samsung Pay"

  • More smart phones than before the banks jumped on the Android pay stuff and stopped the system around 5 years ago?

  • With Samsung pay, your phone would also be explosive.
  • Anyone else read that as Samsung Pry?

  • Serious question (maybe the wrong place to ask it): What is Samsung Pay?

    I have a Galaxy S7 but one of my main problems with it is that it's piled with so much crap that I don't know how to use (or turn off). My assumption was that Samsung Pay was just another of Samsung's attempts to do something that some other thing (like Android Pay) already does, but in its own, Samsung-y way. So I've pretty much ignored it. Now I seem to be hearing that Samsung Pay even works if the checkout terminal doesn't have NFC?

    • by Scutter ( 18425 )

      Alright, even though Google is a thing that you should know how to use by now, I'll go ahead and bite.

      Samsung Pay is an electronic payment method similar to Apple Pay or Android Pay. It comes pre-loaded on high-end Samsung phones. One of its key differentiators is that it can use the MST magnetic coil in the back of the phone to mimic swiping your physical credit card through a card reader. This means it works at all of those terminals that don't yet have NFC readers built-in. Given the (relative) lack o

  • I am not a user of Samsung Pay, since I have an iPhone. But I do use Apple Pay whenever I get the chance. It's basically the same NFC technology in the end, and most places that I see the NFC wireless logo, I have not had a problem paying with Apple Pay even if it doesn't explicitly have the Apple Pay logo on it. From my perspective, the biggest obstacle to the acceptance of NFC-based payments is getting the retailers to adopt it. The banks are on board, because if the increased security, and many early ado
    • I've found that many small businesses that used to have NFC capability lost it when they did the upgrades to accept EMV (chip cards) and didn't spend the extra to also get NFC. So several places where I used to use Apple Pay no longer accept it (or any NFC).

    • by lucm ( 889690 )

      Why is NFC being adopted on various POS devices yet there is no training of the front-end clerks as to the fact that NFC-based payments are being accepted?

      Because front-end clerks are disposable resources and NFC hasn't reached yet the threshold that justifies additional training. Keep in mind that many fast food chains and car services are actively working on solutions that would replace low wage workers. There's no incentive to train people.

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