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Mobile Local Search
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Google Applies For 'GPay' Mobile Payments Patent
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Google Applies For 'GPay'
Mobile Payments Patent
September 4, 2007
Adding to its rapidly growing suite of mobile applications
and services, Google(GOOG) has applied for a patent for a mobile payments service that would allow users to make payments
at retail shops using their mobile phones. Using text messages, the system dubbed "GPay" would authenticate
payments, debit the purchaser's account, and credit the seller's account.
Originally filed in February
2006, the application was made public by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office last week.
Perceiving that future
growth will come largely from advertising to mobile users, Google has launched an ambitious series of initiatives to accomplish
in the mobile world what it has done in the online universe. The company has been making many of its popular online applications,
including its leading search engine and its Google Maps and Gmail services, available on mobile phones over the last couple
of years. Google has also signaled its intention to bid in the upcoming FCC auction of valuable wireless spectrum in the 700-MHz
band, and in July it entered into a partnership with Sprint Nextel(S) to provide users of the WiMax network the No. 3 U.S.
carrier is building with Web services including e-mail, chat, and social networking tools.
Described as "a
computer-implemented method of effectuating an electronic on-line payment," the system referred to in the patent application
is similar to existing mobile-payment services, including the mobile version of PayPal. Such services have been available
for some time but have had little success breaking through with merchants and with customers.
In June Verizon(VZ)
Wireless, the No. 2 U.S. carrier, said it would offer subscribers mobile-payment options through privately held Obopay. Verizon
called the service "the first mobile payment offering for any major U.S. carrier." Three weeks later Obopay announced
the closing of a third round of venture funding, worth $29 million.
Google already has an online payment system
called Google Checkout, launched a year ago. In May it released the mobile version of Google Checkout, which works only for
online purchases.
The difference between existing mobile payment systems and GPay (the term the application says
would be used to initiating payment sessions via text message) is, of course, that GPay is backed by Google. In theory, Google
could offer merchants a discount on (or elimination of) transaction processing fees in exchange for advertising purchases
by the merchant -- making it a much more formidable competitor to other novel forms of payment being brought to market by
large financial services companies such as Visa.
Still, the growing array of Google mobile initiatives doesn't
have a cohesive centerpiece until the long-rumored mobile device with the Google brand -- already dubbed the GPhone and reportedly
in development by Taiwanese handset manufacturer HTC -- makes its appearance.
Source: informationweek.com
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| Mobile Search report |
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| Click the image for more info |
Awareness of mobile local search continues
to grow with consumers, creating new opportunities for brands and vendors
to exploit the power of the mobile channel. This report explores these opportunities and vendors that exploit them,
and provides a general overview of the current market
and technology landscape The report
addresses the following questions, - How
important is the user's real-time location?
- How
important is the user's profile?
- How
important is the user's usage pattern?
- Who's
driving the mobile local search market?
- What's
driving the mobile local search market?
- Do
you offer off-portal and/or on-portal solutions?
- Why
on-portal matters?
- Why off-portal matters?
- For real-time location, who do you partner
with?
See more about the report here.
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