Facebook’s expansion continues as the company looks set to introduce a mobile payments system on its messenger app.
Screenshots taken by iOS developer Andrew Aude reveal how Facebook users
can add a credit or debit card to their account and send money via
messages. Transfers appear as though they need to be verified by a pin.
Aude tweeted: “With Facebook Messenger, you attach money like you attach a photo or a location. You don’t even have to link a bank account!”
Jonathan Zdziarski, an iOS forensics expert, also tweeted about possible payments on Facebook.
He posted a picture of some code with the phrase ‘FBPaymentsCreditCard’
and wrote: “Not necessarily the best design to keep credit card details
in Objective-C objects in resident memory. But meh.”
This is the latest expansion in what is already been a big year for Facebook during which they have acquired Whatsapp messaging service for a record-breaking ££, revealed a predilection for social science research with their Happiness experiment, and plotted a move into healthcare services.
A Facebook mobile payment service has been long-in-the-making, with
the company first exploring money transfers in 2010, albeit via
third-party developers.
The social network is already requesting
“e-money” status in its European headquarters in Ireland, and is
permitted to transfer money in the US through gaming apps like
Farmville.
Its ‘e-money’ initiative would allow digital credits to be converted
into cash, and if approval is granted then Facebook can operate this
model throughout the continent using “passporting” rules that enables
online payments across EU countries without country specific regulation.
The
leaked system does not suggest that Facebook is doing what Apple are
with their new Pay initative, nor what Google have long-done with their
wallet – it will not work to enable physical purchases.
Facebook has not yet commented.
Culled from The Independent
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