Official: AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon to launch mobile commerce network

Breaking

Today, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless officially took the wraps off of their rumored mobile payment service. Dubbed ISIS, the new “mobile commerce network” aims to use NFC (near-field communication) technology to make mobile phones the preferred method of payment for consumer point-of-sales transactions.

“While payments are at the core of the offering, it is only the start,” reads the press release. “Isis intends to deliver a complete mobile wallet experience that goes well beyond ‘credit card on a phone’ and makes the shopping experience significantly easier by eliminating the need for consumers to carry cash, credit and debit cards, reward cards, coupons, tickets and transit passes.”

The tri-network venture has a customer-base of over 200 million and expects to launch in “key geographic markets” in the next 18 months. ISIS will provide the associated wireless carriers with another revenue stream to help bolster their oh-so-important bottom lines. Hit the jump for the full press release.

AT&T, T-MOBILE AND VERIZON WIRELESS ANNOUNCE JOINT VENTURE TO BUILD NATIONAL MOBILE COMMERCE NETWORK

Isis to Lead the U.S. Payments Industry from Cards to Mobile Phones; Available to All Merchants, Banks and Wireless Service Providers; Venture Led By Former GE Capital Financial Executive

New York – November 16, 2010 – AT&T Mobility, T-Mobile USA and Verizon Wireless today announced the formation of a joint venture chartered with building ISIS™, a national mobile commerce network that aims to fundamentally transform how people shop, pay and save.

Isis’ initial focus will be on building a mobile payment network that utilizes mobile phones to make point-of-sale purchases. By utilizing smartphone and near-field communication (NFC) technology to modernize the payments process, Isis intends to deliver new levels of competition and value to consumers and merchants. Isis expects to introduce its service in key geographic markets during the next 18 months.

Michael Abbott has been named as Chief Executive Officer of Isis. Formerly with GE Capital, Abbott is a veteran financial services executive with extensive experience in the payment and technology industries.

“Our mobile commerce network, through relationships with merchants, will provide an enhanced, more convenient, more personalized shopping experience for consumers,” said Michael Abbott, Chief Executive Officer of Isis. “While mobile payments will be at the core of our offering, it is only the start. We plan to create a mobile wallet that ultimately eliminates the need for consumers to carry cash, credit and debit cards, reward cards, coupons, tickets and transit passes.”

Isis Brings Both Consumer and Merchant Scale

Founding members, AT&T Mobility, T-Mobile USA and Verizon Wireless, collectively provide wireless services to more than 200 million consumers who will have access to the Isis service. Isis is working with Discover Financial Services’ payment network, currently accepted at more than seven million merchant locations nationwide, to develop an extensive mobile payment infrastructure for the joint venture.

Barclaycard US, part of Barclays PLC, is expected to be the first issuer on the network, offering multiple mobile payment products to meet the needs of every customer.

“We believe the venture will have the scope and scale necessary to introduce mobile commerce on a broad basis. In the beginning, we intend to fully utilize Discover’s national payment infrastructure as well as Barclaycard’s expertise in contactless and mobile payments,” said Abbott. “Moving forward, Isis will be available to all interested merchants, banks and mobile carriers.”

How It Works

The new venture will enable contactless mobile payment and commerce services using near-field communication technology. NFC uses short-range, high frequency wireless technology to enable the encrypted exchange of information between devices at a short distance. The new system is being designed and built to include strong security and privacy safeguards.

About Isis

The joint venture is between AT&T Mobility LLC, T-Mobile USA and Verizon Wireless and is based in New York City.  The venture is chartered with building ISIS™, a national mobile commerce network that will fundamentally transform how people shop, pay and save.  The Isis mobile commerce network will be available to all merchants, banks and mobile carriers. ISIS is a trademark of JVL Ventures, LLC in the U.S. and/or other countries.  Other logos, product and company names mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.

Read

19 Comments
  • defTwitch

    This should be stellar news for those of you with extremely thick wallets who sit at an angle all day =)

    • Chimera

      This is an awesome step forward! Finally, we’ll be catching up to Japan and what they’ve happen for years.

  • Anonymous

    Oh wow nice, I can hardly wait!

    http://www.online-privacy.edu.tc

  • Jeremiah

    One has to wonder where Sprint was in all these talks. You’d think it’d be last place T-Mobile who gets left out hahahaha…poor Sprint :-P

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/William-Diaz/100000639956723 William Diaz

      They probably were left out because they already have done this in the past, and it didnt exactly catch on. I “knew someone” who was a tester for it here in San Francisco – they tested it at Jack in the Box, and BART for transit. It worked, but you had to get a new phone, all these requirements so the consumers didnt want it.

      As for them Sprint not being part of it, its likely because all these other companies are hurting for new innovations to keep them afloat once their precious iPhone leaves one and jumps to another..Where as Sprint has a ton of MVNO’s and other things keeping them afloat. That and you certainly wouldnt want someone (Sprint) who knows what they are doing with NFC to take it all over and show them how to do it. The more problems these companies have the more they can blame each other and still take your money for crap.

      • http://twitter.com/pro_eco Danny Thai

        It’s funny that Sprint is not included.

        I actually went to the place to pick up the Sprint phone to pay for Jack In the Box, Taco Bell, BART…in the Bay Area. I decided to opt out of it.

        That was way back in January 2008.

        Sprint certainly knows a thing or two about NFC. They had, after all, one of the first pilot projects in the US.

        Now, the interesting question is, what’s Sprint’s plans?

  • Anonymous

    Okay, I’m not going to lie, I’m excited about this. I know it’d make losing your phone that much worse, but let’s be honest. If you’re the kind of person regularly reading/posting on BGR, losing your phone basically feels like the end of the world anyway, even though you’ve got a backup on your computer, security lockdown on the phone, etc.

    There’s something to be said about not really having to carry around anything except some identification and dollar bills for the stripp-ahem, for the old vending machines that can’t be retrofitted.

    • http://twitter.com/MattSTKC Matthew H.

      Japan has been doing this for years using your phone and NFC to pay for Gas, Transit, taxis, ATM withdrawls and deposits, and instead of losing your wallet and having to make one call for every card in your wallet, you make one call to the phone company and they deactivate your phone. Yes losing your phone will be a hinderance to “making a call” but with consumer fraud protection and Cameras at every ATM, Gas Station, Convenience store, etc, if somone steals your phone and uses it to buy stuff, they’ll be caught on tape one way or another, and they won’t have your actual account #s.

      • Anonymous

        Yeah, I was aware of that. I just find it really exciting that we’re finally going to start trying to catch up to Japan in something technological. Especially when it’s something as cool as NFC.

  • darkness

    Just another way to make it easier for people to get thier meathooks on your money. Then there’s the targeted advertising based on your complete purchasing profile. That’s where the real money will be…

    • http://twitter.com/MattSTKC Matthew H.

      exactly. That’s why Google is king online, but with the networks doing this themselves, they’re going to be able to cut Google out of this revenue stream.

      • Anonymous

        Like they have the rich database and software skills to push Google out of their way?Dream on, these guys will fail right out of the gate. The required skill set is just so far over their heads.

  • http://twitter.com/MattSTKC Matthew H.

    Awesome. So the 3 networks most likely to end up with the iPhone by the end of 2011 are going NFC and working together.

  • Booboolala2000

    IPhone Not the only one with this technology and does not weild a patent for the chip. It is a chip that does this, not the os. If you don’t have a iPhone 4, or some of the newer Android phones (that haven’t come out yet) you will not be able to use this upcoming feature.
    I won’t use it unless they enable security features that mean if someone steals your phone they wont have access to this feature. Make it password protected and when you enable the feature it should auto disable in five minutes or less.

  • Dale

    Would you really trust AT&T to handle financial transactions directly from your account?

  • rawrrawr

    i dont trust any of them.

    • defTwitch

      I used to hear a friend say that same thing about the “internet” many years back. Unfortunately for him technological advances seem to go forward regardless of his trust level… and eventually he signed on like the rest of us…

  • squiber

    Lol at&t are morons, they have lost entire payments before. And that’s once a month, yet they are ready to handle $3000 of my transactions a month? Yeah right!

  • Junk

    How is this different than the small rfid chip “sticker” CitiBank sent me to slip in to my phone cover? Now I just use the phone to tap and go in taxis, 7-11 and a bunch of other places.

blog comments powered by Disqus