Samsung Pay has added a cash back option where customers can earn 5 percent cash back when paying with the...
Apple, Google and now Samsung have all entered into the financial services space in a bid to provide a better...
Samsung has already been working with bank branches for five years; the new retail pop-ups will be rolled out in “sooner than a year”; an example of the pop-ups is a shopping center which usually has ATMs where banks could setup for a weekend to attract new customers; Samsung provides the devices that help bank employees engage with their customers. Source
Samsung has created a cloud-based enterprise blockchain platform; details from its trademark registration also report that the system is permissioned and has been created to form a consortium of trusted participants; functions of the platform reportedly include smart contracts for financial services, a loyalty point program and authentication for financial services; Samsung has previously invested in blockchain-as-a service platform Blocko and is a member of the Hyperledger. Source
CEO Brad Paterson Of Fintech Upstart Splitit On The Future Of E-commerce, Payments, Fintech, And BNPL (By Now, Pay Later)...
The fintech world is not taking the summer off. New developments are coming fast and furious, from fundraisings to product launches to government intervention.
Banking for brands startup Bond raised $32 million to capitalize on the exploding trend of B2B2C banking.
Samsung Money launched, leveraging SoFi’s infrastructure. As SoFi again seeks a national banking charter, they could become the de facto leader in this space.
Kabbage and Intuit launched small business bank accounts as extensions of their already deep relationships with SMBs.
And WhatsApp is trialing all sorts of financial services in India just as Chinese fintech super apps are being banned from the country.
Samsung’s new Galaxy S9 is marketed as having a better camera and can take clear pictures in low light; the technology could solve one of the bigger facial recognition issues which is poor quality pictures in low lighting; thus far banks have been slow to adopt the new technology as they have yet to be comfortable wit the way it currently works; with Samsung and Apple continuing to improve their cameras and a younger generation of customers increasing, facial recognition will soon be an important piece for all banks. Source.
The discussion at American Banker’s annual Digital Banking Conference in Austin last week revolved around new technologies like AI and...
London-based fintech Curve has been selected by Samsung to power the Samsung Pay Card in the UK; the debit card,...
This week, we consider the impact of financial infrastructure collapse and who really gets hurt through the lens of Wirecard, Enron, and Lehman Brothers. Yes, there are investors in the entity that will lose value. But there are also clients and counterparties of Wirecard, like Curve, Revolut, and Crypto.com. In the case of Lehman, there was a $40 trillion derivatives notional amount that took twenty years to wind down. We also consider the most recent $500,000 hacking in DeFi of an automated market maker to see if there are common threads to be drawn between the two worlds.