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Bimf Expedia Purchases Travelocity for $280 Million
Mastercard聽has teamed with聽NEC聽to bring biometric checkout to the Asia Pacific region.The partnership,聽announced聽Tuesday Nov. 14 , combines NECs facial recognition and liveness verification technology with Mastercards payment operations, and comes as consumers and businesses are increasingly embracing biometrics. As retailing enviro stanley france (https://www.cup-stanley.fr) nments continue to evolve and choices in ways to pay rapidly expand, biometric solutions offer a seamless, quick and secure checkout, without needing to unlock a phone or insert a PIN, Ajay Bhalla, president, Cyber and Intell stanley cup nz (https://www.stanleycups.co.nz) igence Solutions, Mastercard, said in a news release.Bhalla added that the collaboration will bring exciting new biometric payments to customers in countries across Asia Pacific and lead the world in safe and convenient checkout experiences. Mastercard launched its biometric checkout program in Brazil last year with its Smile and Pay offering, allowing in-person payments to transact with a smile or the wave of a hand. The company says the technologys benefits for merchants include shorter lines, added security and more hygienic conditions, while offering a stanley cup (https://www.cups-stanley-cups.us) more engaging relationship with customers.And in September, Mastercard teamed with Mercedes to let the carmakers drivers make in-vehicle payments using聽fingerprint recognition.Mastercards latest partnership is happening amid a flurry of product launches involving biometric payments, including Amazons announcement that it was integrating radio-frequency identification t Qfjc How One Global Payments Network Addresses the Complexity of Cross-Border Payments
In the fast-paced world of cross-border trade, thinki stanley termos (https://www.stanleycup.pl) ng globally and acting locally is no stanley mug (https://www.stanleycup.fr) t as simple as it sounds.With old rules evolving into new ones, geographic boundaries and their own set of regulations are just some of the many complexities that add friction to the process of international business. For merchants, conducting cross-border trade often means following another nations local rules around payment acceptance, compliance, taxes and physical requirements and a host of other factors that vary between borders.And when merchants are dealing with these complexities, thinking locally can depend heavily on where a companys headquarters is located as much as by the countries and regions in which it operates.Navigating through this labyrinth is often a time-consuming challenge for merchants that makes thinking globally and acting locally all the more difficult. So, whats a merchant to do PYMNTS spoke with Casey Bullock, general manager of North America for Worldpay, a global payments solutions provider that works with nearly 400,000 merchants operating in 126 currencies and 146 countries. Bullock discussed the compliance challenges of various payment scheme regulations that cross-border merchants often need to confront.Political uncertainly and global t stanley quencher (https://www.stanleycup.com.de) radeWith 2017 now in full swing, Bullock said he is encouraged by what he sees as a strong economy worldwide that shows signs of growth. He noted that Worldpays 2016 Global Payments Report anticipates the global eCommer