Online financial transactions titan PayPal announced that it has bought a San Francisco startup focused on using smartphone cameras to take credit card payments.
PayPal has worked with Card.io to fold its
technology into its own mobile application and decided to buy the
company, according to PayPal vice president of global product Hill
Ferguson.
"We were simply blown away by the creativity and drive of their employees," Ferguson said in a blog post.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Card.io will continue to provide kits for
software developers to build credit card scanning capabilities into
applications for Apple or Android-powered smartphones, according to
Ferguson.
The technology lets payments be made using data captured from pictures of credit cards taken with smartphone cameras.
"We can't wait to get them involved in helping us change the future of shopping and payments," Ferguson said.
PayPal has been ramping up services tailored
for mobile devices as smartphones and tablet computers weave ever
tighter into modern lifestyles.
PayPal faces competition from startup Square,
a brainchild of Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, and Google Wallet
technology for Android smartphones.
PayPal in March started to allow merchants across the world to take payments using smartphones in a direct challenge to Square.
A PayPal Here system currently in "exclusive
release" uses a triangle-shaped "dongle" card reader that plugs into
mobile devices to let people make purchases.
PayPal Here software also lets shopkeepers
take payments by snapping a picture of a card with a smartphone instead
of having to swipe it in the dongle.
Square has been a hit with independent
entrepreneurs and small businesses as wide ranging as masseuses and taxi
drivers to farmers and bicycle shops.
Dorsey's Square, based in San Francisco, has
been lauded since the application and accompanying dongle, the shape of
which gave the startup its name, was released in the United States in
2010.
Google Wallet takes a different approach by
letting users store credit card data in secure chips in Android
smartphones that can transmit the data to sensors at shop checkout
stations.
© 2012 AFP
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© 2012 AFP
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