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 Subscription commerce is undergoing changes in 2020.For one change, that form of retail is expanding to include new and fresh areas, which includes cars and  stanley usa trucks.Automotive SubscriptionsAutomotive sales are increasingly going digital 鈥?and more consumers are buying more used products of all types online. Those two retail trends have recently collided in Southeast Asia, where Carro, an automotive marketplace and financing provider, has reportedly bought Jualo, an online marketplace for used goods from some 300 product categories.According to the report, the deal comes as Carro raised some $30 million in fresh capital.  Jualo has amassed four mill stanley website ion monthly active users and facilitated transactions worth $1 billion last year,  the report stated.  Carro, which operates in Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia, said more than $500 million worth of vehicles were sold last year on its platform, up from $250 million in 2017 and $120 million the year before. Indeed, the anticipat stanley france ed compound annual growth rate  CAGR  of the global automotive subscription services market through 2022 is 71 percent.In an effort to reach drivers who want the convenience and variety of a subscription,聽Mercedes-Benz聽is rolling out a聽pilot service聽called the Mercedes-Benz Collection.聽Drivers will be able to access Mercedes-Benz vehicles in聽Philadelphia and Nashville聽with the launch, the company said in an聽announcement. With the pilot, Mercedes-Benz is launching three tiers: Signature, Reserve and Premier. Dr Wnxx 5 Best Practices for Payables, Receivables Digitization
 When breach notification letters become as common as holiday cards and promotional flyers from the local grocer, they tend to lose any impact. That   the concern being raised following poll results released Wednesday  Dec. 17  from the Wall Street Journal and NBC News that showed 45 percent of Americans say that they received one of those beloved breach notifications from a retailer of card-issuer.That figure has contributed to what many retail analysts are calling breach fatigue, ; in which consumers stop worrying about cyberattacks because they appear in the news so frequently, the Journal story said. In the past year alone, major breaches have been reported at Target, J.P. Morgan Chase, Home Depot, K-Mart, SuperValu and others. In many of those cases, the victims and card-issuers pledged to protect consumers from fraudulent charges.The Journal/NBC poll of 1,000 adults was conducted from Dec. 10-14. It has a mar gourde stanley gin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.Another interesting stat is that 15 percent said either they or a member of their household had been hit by online fraud or hacking. When Gallup asked the same question more than four years ago, 11 percent answered yes. It   not clear how significant that is, given that four years is a very long time in terms of consumer appr stanley polska eciat stanley deutschland ion of online cyber attacks and that the methodologies鈥攏ot to the mention the precise audience polled鈥攊n the two surveys co