In Canada it’s tap to pay for ~8 years now, never saw a QR code to pay. However when I go in USA, every stores is tap to pay, except one, there’s one store in USA where there is no tap, it’s Walmart, inconcevable.
Why does Asia scan to pay when the rest of the world taps? • The Register
Submitted 4 months ago by sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al to technology@beehaw.org
https://www.theregister.com/2024/06/17/asia_qr_code_obsession/
Comments
Frederic@beehaw.org 4 months ago
OR3X@lemm.ee 4 months ago
It’s scan to pay at Walmart because they gave their own payment system called “Walmart pay” and it sucks.
Kissaki@beehaw.org 4 months ago
There was no reason they had to implement it with scan though, was there?
stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca 4 months ago
The article more or less covers it. Asian countries without a credit card culture mostly transitioned to QR because it was easy with minimal equipment changes required. Those with widespread credit cards accept tap and QR (e.g. Taiwan widely accepts QR payments, Google pay, Apple pay, credit cards, and transit cards).
Since the western world has been on credit cards for decades that is the solution that is accepted there with QR payments being almost exclusively in businesses that have a customer base from Asian countries. Even then the US is odd compared to other countries since they never really adopted chip and pin.
autotldr@lemmings.world [bot] 4 months ago
🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:
Click here to see the summary
A shopper visiting a convenience store and selecting items worth $10 would present them to staff who would scan them all, after which a point-of-sale terminal would display a dynamically-generated QR code. In 2011, Alibaba’s financial services arm Alipay adopted QR codes as a means to have offline stores accept payment from the wallet function of its flagship app. “Penetration rates of credit cards were low, cash was king, and there was no big player that could gather the whole country, nor any bank that could roll out mobile payments in the existing system.” That state of affairs meant that the West’s embrace of near-field communications (NFC) tech to power tap-to-pay services that relied on credit and debit cards – either standalone or virtualized in smartphones – had little chance of success in China. While QR code payments have become utterly ubiquitous across Asia, Christophe Uzureau, a VP analyst at Gartner, told The Register the many schemes across the region are “highly fragmented.” Dr Ondrus drew on experiences with Singapore’s hawker markets – outdoor food courts - to illustrate how the island nation consolidated its QR code payment schemes and plugged them into a common backend. — Saved 88% of original text.
lvxferre@mander.xyz 4 months ago
Brazil ended with a third system: Pix. It boils down to the following:
The “key” in question can be your cell phone number, physical/juridical person registre number, e-mail, or even a random number. You can have up to five of them.
Regarding dynamic codes, it’s also possible to generate a key or QR code that applies to a single transaction. Then the value to be paid is already included.
Frankly the system surprised me. It’s actually good and practical; and that’s coming from someone who’s highly suspicious of anything coming from the federal government, and who hates cell phones. [insert old man screaming at clouds meme]
abbadon420@lemm.ee 4 months ago
This sounds very reasonable and not unlike payment apps I use, like Tikkie or Klarna
lvxferre@mander.xyz 4 months ago
Yeah, it’s actually good. People use it even for trivial stuff nowadays; and you don’t need a pix key to send stuff, only to receive it. (And as long as your bank allows you to check the account through an actual computer, you don’t need a cell phone either.)
Perhaps the only flaw is shared with the Asian QR codes - scams are a bit of a problem, you could for example tell someone that the transaction will be a value and generate a code demanding a bigger one. But I feel like that’s less of an issue with the system and more with the customer, given that the system shows you who you’re sending money to, and how much, before confirmation.
I’m not informed on Tikkie and Klarna, besides one being Dutch and another Swedish. How do they work?
UltraGiGaGigantic@lemm.ee 4 months ago
Thanks for sharing. Interstellar stuff!
argh_another_username@lemmy.ca 4 months ago
For people in Canada, Pix is like Interac with automatic deposit activated.