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September 25, 2008 11:57 AM PDT

Visa's charge card concept goes wireless

by Dawn Kawamoto
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Visa is adding a wireless twist to the old phrase "Charge It."

The credit card processing giant announced Thursday several initiatives to allow its credit card toting customers the ability to transfer money, make payments, and receive real-time account notification alerts on their Nokia and Android cellular phones. Visa also struck a mobile deal with U.S. Bank.

Under a pilot program with U.S. Bank, which is scheduled to begin by the end of the year, Visa will offer mobile money transfers from one Visa cardholder's account to another. A U.S. Bank Visa cardholder would use a Web browser on their phone to access funds and transfer it directly to the recipient's account. The recipient could then withdraw the funds from an ATM machine, or use the money to make purchases.

Visa is also working with cell phone giant Nokia and new entrant Google's Android to offer mobility to its service.

The Visa-Android deal calls for Chase Visa cardholders to use their Android phone for not only transferring money, but also to receive real-time email alerts when transactions happen on their Visa account, receive offers from merchants, and view images on Google maps to find the location of those merchants who are offering the specials. The Google-Visa deal is expected to begin sometime by the end of the year.

Visa has also struck a similar deal with Nokia for its Nokia 6212 Classic phone. That service is expected to beginning next month.

Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.
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by benjaminstraight September 25, 2008 12:36 PM PDT
Makes it all easier.
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by Ian Kirkland September 25, 2008 1:00 PM PDT
I can already do this using the funds transfer features of my bank from their website on my iPhone. No deals or partnerships necessary.
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by cyberDJ-2038765336053745013836 September 25, 2008 4:58 PM PDT
Obviously, this is not the same thing as a money transfer via a smartphone.
by ssidner September 25, 2008 2:32 PM PDT
Anytime you report on a mobile payment service, you not only should report the technology, but also the fee structure. Many technological payment solutions have failed because of the fees. The technology reported above is easy. How did they solve the hard fee problem? How much does the consumer pay? What is part of the fees goes to the telco, the bank, and to Visa?

Also, how many keystrokes does it take to do a payment?
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by idfubar September 25, 2008 5:39 PM PDT
"Ssidner" is right and should add the question "Can I actually use my phone to pay for things like people have been able to do in Europe for years?!?!"
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by thatswhatithought September 27, 2008 1:37 AM PDT
This gives me even more ideas for things to do with my domains:
http://noatm.com
http://noatm.us
http://noatm.mobi
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