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| | |-+  Let your fingers do the paying (from CNN news site..)
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Author Topic: Let your fingers do the paying (from CNN news site..)  (Read 1157 times)
tiger_lily33
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« on: February 01, 2006, 09:54:49 AM »

this was sent to me from a friend that read it in the CNN news site.. thought id share it, sorry Tom if this isnt where it shoud be posted please just move it to where u figure..
TL


Let your fingers do the paying Lips Sealed
Wal-Mart, Costco weigh merits of allowing customers to pay by scanning fingerprints: report

By Matthew Boyle, FORTUNE writer
January 24, 2006: 5:57 AM EST



NEW YORK (FORTUNE) - Buying groceries with the touch of a finger could be closer than you think, if new research touting the benefits of biometric payment for retail giants like Wal-Mart, Target, and Costco is anything to go by.
The report, by Sanford Bernstein analyst Emme Kozloff, found that the use of so-called "electronic wallets" reduces the potential for fraud and identity theft, speeds up the checkout process, and most importantly, lowers transaction processing fees for retailers, improving their bottom line. A 20% reduction in processing costs at big-box discounters like Wal-Mart over the next several years could result in a 3% to 4% increase in earnings per share by 2009, the report estimated. "We believe both Wal-Mart (Research) and Costco (Research) are looking at it closely," Kozloff wrote. (Both companies declined to comment.)
Already in use at supermarket chains like Albertsons (Research) (which yesterday agreed to be sold to a group that includes CVS and Supervalu), Cub Foods (part of Supervalu), and privately held Piggly Wiggly, biometric systems are just one of several emerging payment technologies that retailers are currently experimenting with. Others include self-checkout (widely deployed at Home Depot), contactless cards like J.P Morgan Chase's "blink," and so-called "near field communication," which involves waving your cell phone, say, near a reader.
Here's how biometric payment works: To set up an account, customers scan their fingerprint at an in-store kiosk, enter their phone number, and then submit checking and credit card account information. To make a purchase, they place their finger on a scanner at the register, enter their phone number, and choose how they want to pay (credit, debit, or checking.)
The mere mention of bio-anything raises the hackles of privacy advocates, and this process is no exception. Vendors like San Francisco-based Pay By Touch, however, which recently acquired BioPay, its main rival in this space, insist that the fingerprint image itself is not stored. Instead, tiny measurements from the print are encrypted and stored, making it impossible to recreate a full fingerprint.
The benefits to customers are twofold. First, it offers a speedier checkout—70% faster than traditional forms of payment (unless the reader can't identify your finger, so keep those hands clean.) Second, it enhances security. Of the nearly 10 million cases of identity theft annually, according to a 2003 Federal Trade Commission survey, 13% occurred during a purchase transaction. "Biometric payment systems make conducting transactions safer for consumers," writes Kozloff.
But it's the benefit to retailers that could really drive adoption. Transaction fees paid by retailers for credit and debit card payments have soared of late, and can account for about 20% of pretax profits for a low margin retailer like Costco, Kozloff estimates. Retailers hate these fees (also called "intercharge fees") and have filed numerous lawsuits against Visa and MasterCard, some of which have attained class action status.
Paying by fingerprint is one way to lower these costs. With a biometric system, retailers can "steer" customers towards using their checking account, which incurs much lower transaction costs than credit and debit cards do. AMR Research's Scott Langdoc estimates that switching from credit cards to checking accounts could shave the net cost of a transaction by anywhere from 40 cents to 70 cents. "That's big money," he says.
Within three months of a pilot program at four Piggly Wiggly grocery stores, 15% of its customers who normally did not pay by cash enrolled in the Pay By Touch system. Those users increased their store visits by 15%, which translates into an additional 7,350 transactions a year. Not only did they come more often, those shoppers also spent 12% more on groceries.
"Grocery stores operate on such low margins that this makes sense for them," says Don Delzell, a partner at consultancy Retail Advantage.
But biometric is not without its concerns, chief among them privacy. The privacy issue "remains a deep bone of contention and will mitigate against pervasive usage," says David Robertson, publisher of The Nilson Report, an industry newsletter. One industry source calls biometric readers "clunky." And if enrollment is confusing or time-consuming, few shoppers will even bother.
"It's a leap of faith when retailers install the system," says industry consultant Ron Margulis. "But once shoppers are used to it, it can really take off." And it might even take retailers' sluggish stock prices along for the ride. 
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Stop telling God how big your storm is, instead, start telling your storm how big your God is!
nChrist
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« Reply #1 on: February 04, 2006, 10:49:12 AM »

Hello Tiger,

Sister, this area is fine. Some of the companies that you mentioned have horrible business practices, and I seriously doubt they would go 100% to any system like that. They could save tons of money by just using common sense without any high technology. I would guess that every customer currently pays between 8 and 15% because of companies failing to use common sense.

Example: a burglar steals blank checks belonging to Gertrude Charlotte Humdinger. The male burglar goes on a very quick buying spree with the hot checks, and many of the stores don't even check the gender of the person paying. They simply check their database to see if any bad checks have been written to the store on that account and take the check. I could give you many other common sense examples that cost every good and honest customer money every time they buy anything.

If you are thinking about what might become the mark of the beast in the future, there would be many guesses that Christians have talked about. There are all kinds of technology emerging that are much more sophisticated than finger prints. My personal guess would be something that is visible that would contain and probably somehow transmit large amounts of information about the person that could be immediately confirmed in some manner.

Love In Christ,
Tom

Acts 10:34-35 NASB  Opening his mouth, Peter said: "I most certainly understand now that God is not one to show partiality, but in every nation the man who fears Him and does what is right is welcome to Him.
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