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The Retard
02-02-2006, 02:44 AM
Is It Time To Say Goodbye to Paper Money?
2006-02-01

Since the late 1990s, when the expansion and adoption of the Internet created a bona fide Mecca for retailers and shoppers, people have looked forward to the day when physical cash would no longer be the mainstay of payment transactions.

When the Internet boom came to a screeching halt in 2000, some experts believed that it also marked the end of efforts to establish digital currencies.

But the continuing success of the online payment service PayPal, as well as the recent adoption of so-called e-cash by 15 million people in Japan, has bought the electronic-money movement new momentum.

The push for electronic money became an integral part of the digital revolution during the mid to late '90s. It was based on the premise that consumers would balk when asked to submit their credit-card numbers when making a purchase.

Giving online customers a way to convert physical cash into digital coin seemed like the solution. This "e-money" would be stored offline on cards embedded with a chip -- smart cards -- or within a computer's hard drive, and it could be used to make any kind of purchase.

A bevy of private digital currency start-ups hit the Web. But these currencies amounted to little more than digital Green Stamps. Designed for use online only, the currencies that were created by companies such as Beenz.com, Flooz.com, Goldmoney.com, and others were not connected to any government or central bank.

While some promoters and consumers found the lack of government involvement a plus, most shoppers and merchants were hesitant to jump in to these online money schemes. Many companies folded as the dot-com boom began its downturn in 2000.

Today, however, for 15 million Japanese, paper money is a thing of the past, according to the Japan Research Institute. No longer solely used for online purchases, e-money, accessed via a smart card or mobile phone, has become a way of life for many consumers in Japan.

The e-money trend began there roughly four years ago as a service for busy, on-the-go train commuters. Today, specially equipped mobile phones and smart cards are used to purchase items from convenience stores, department stores, restaurants, newsstands, supermarkets, and other retailers. The Japan Research Institute estimated that by 2008 some 40 million Japanese, roughly one-third of the country, will be using electronic money.

Technologies such as FeliCa, from Sony, use integrated chips that enable devices to receive and emit electronic signals. These "contactless" or near-field communication (NFC) devices include mobile phones, transit cards, and prepaid e-money cards.

Japanese Economic Monthly reported last year that NTT DoCoMo, the country's leading mobile-communications company, had sold some 3.34 million handsets equipped with the FeliCa technology through April 2005. In 2005, the number of digital-money transactions more than doubled, averaging around 15.8 million each month, according to statistics from the two largest electronic-money providers in Japan. Some Japanese supermarkets have reported that up to 40 percent of all purchases now are made with e-cash.

Other countries, notably Hong Kong and Canada, also have implemented electronic-cash systems that have seen some adoption. But if you are waiting for similar technology to become the norm in the United States, you might want to hang on to those greenbacks.

Joe Levine, a senior analyst at Yankee Group, is skeptical that U.S. paper money or coins will fall by the wayside anytime soon. Creating a cashless society in the U.S. with either mobile phones or smart cards would require enormous effort by players in several industries, he said, including credit-card companies, mobile-phone service providers, manufacturers, and retailers.

Japan is so far along because companies like DoCoMo are the heavy hitters in their industries, Levine said, and have made significant investments to develop e-cash technologies. DoCoMo, for instance, invested some $900 million to acquire a 34 percent stake in Sumitomo Mitsui Cards, Japan's second-largest credit-card company.

After that deal, announced last April, the credit provider started developing point-of-sale terminals and ATMs for use with DoCoMo's mobile-wallet handsets. Levine said he has not seen anything like that type of commitment in the U.S., as American service providers do not seem as focused on e-money as an opportunity.

"We're more fragmented here [than in Japan], with a larger number of tier one [mobile companies] and a portion of the country that is served by tier-twos," Levine said. "There isn't the same sort of dominant player [like DoCoMo]. There isn't a single wireless company that if they got behind a standard, it would become the standard. And that's a significant difference, that we have a larger, less-consolidated market."

Charles Goldfinger, a consultant who has advised the European Commission on e-finance and smart-card-based financial applications, agreed that DoCoMo's relative dominance in its industry and its base of some 50 million subscribers helped digital money become successful in Japan.

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Kodos
02-02-2006, 02:48 AM
I really hope this never happens...

The Retard
02-02-2006, 03:01 AM
Yeah, it's freaky, especially if you listen to those conspiracy theorists.

Kodos
02-02-2006, 03:04 AM
Yeah, it's freaky, especially if you listen to those conspiracy theorists.

You don't really need to be much of a conspiracy theorist to imagine bad implications from this... government insurance companies etc will know EVERY transaction you ever make... like it will really be kept private too...

A. Radek
02-02-2006, 03:35 AM
they can try, but it will fail, for the simple reason so many people are going bankrupt, incomes are getting lower and lower, and more and more people are not using banks any more. Illegal aliens have to be paid, and they don't use banks in the U.S., they like cash in hand. So do most of the rest of the world. Hnading out and keeping up all those little plastic cards is more overhead and not nearly cost effective past a certain point. If they try, people will just turn to barter or gold or something else, a trend already growing in the counter economy on the lower end of the economic ladder, and the grey and black economies. People will simply adapt to something else, and only the corporate drones will be trapped into accepting scrip that is worthless outside 'approved' retailers and outlets. Look to the Asian economies for proof of this; they've been getting around such schemes and making a mockery of them for at least a thousand years. During the Depression, many towns printed their own money in the U.S., as well as other measures that defied the controls of the big boys, including sabotaging foreclosure auctions with nickel bids and such.

The ultimate protection is these corporations are too fucking stupid and greedy to keep from looting their own systems and send them crashing down in flames through embezzlement, fraud, and monopoly pricing. the Soviets couldn't do it, the Nazis couldn't do it, and neither will the fat idiots running the U.S. be able to do it.

They will have the make the whole thing fee driven, and by the time they nickle and dime every transaction to death to cover overhead there is that much less to spend on goods. Some stores are already being bled by the credit card companies that they're giving discounts for cash, and doctors offices have been doing that for the last couple of decades as well.

Felix the Cat
02-02-2006, 06:48 PM
The sooner ordinary people all get id chip implants in their hands or brains the better

Imagine being able to order pizza just by thinking about it!