Friday, June 8, 2018
By removing the need for online shoppers to share banking or credit card credentials, Paysafe expects paysafecard to appeal to underbanked, video gaming and privacy-conscious consumers while also complying with European Union privacy regulations. Udo Müller, CEO at paysafecard, said these expectations are consistent with company research on consumer trends.
"The risk of fraud and sharing personal data online still concern many consumers," he said. "Lost in Transaction: Payment Trends 2018, our proprietary research launched earlier this week, shows that half of respondents worry about fraudulent purchases and 48 percent worry about the safety of their personal data. This is why offering paysafecard as a way to pay in the Google Play Store has come at the right time to enable consumers and both companies to benefit."
Todd Linden, CEO at Paysafe North America, added, "Seven out of 10 Americans are prepared to accept that fraud is an inevitable risk of shopping online. If retailers, merchants and payments companies want to disrupt the old way of doing things they must make all underlying processes feel secure. Consumers want convenience, but they want protection too."
Lost in Transaction: Payment Trends 2018, updates data from Paysafe's 2017 report, providing insights from 5,056 consumers in Austria, Canada, Germany, the United States and United Kingdom. While buying behaviors varied across regions, researchers observed a majority of survey respondents were distrustful of payment-enabled connected devices and emerging ecommerce payment schemes, due to concerns about privacy and security.
Researchers cited Amazon Go and Uber as examples of new invisible payment schemes that add convenience but may also seem too good to be true to some consumers."[B]y making literally everything invisible, merchants risk frightening people rather than enticing them," they wrote. "The advent of regulation such as PSD2 in Europe is likely to amplify this challenge, as consumers are invited to trust new third parties about which they may know very little."
The European Union's Payment Services Directive 2 (PSD2), which became effective Jan. 13, 2018, gives non-banking entities access to financial institutions' consumer data. PSD2 is part of an open banking initiative, designed to encourage competition and innovation in financial services. As a countermeasure, the EU's General Data Protection Regulation was enacted on May 25, 2018, giving consumers more control over how companies use and store their data.
Linden suggested that consumers who trust a payment system's security and fraud protections will be more likely to change buying habits and try new payment schemes. Merchants who do not enhance security may lose customers to others who offer more robust protections, he noted. Following are additional highlights from the report:
"There are more challenges to tackle with other low friction payment technologies as these findings suggest many consumers aren't ready to lose visibility of the payment process." Linden concluded. "It's clear that the benefits are not unilaterally agreed upon, with cultural and infrastructure trends at play, and it may be some time before adoption is widespread."
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