American Express, Discover, MasterCard, and Visa partner with ISIS for mobile payments

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American Express, Discover, MasterCard, and Visa announced a new partnership with ISIS on Tuesday. ISIS is a mobile initiative that was formed in April of last year by AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless in an effort to help foster the growth of using near-field communications for mobile payments. It’s currently being tested in Salt Lake City and Austin. Tuesday’s announcement means that, as the mobile market moves closer and closer to a time when we can actually use our phones to make tap-and-go payments, consumers will have more payment options. MasterCard also teamed up with Google and Sprint on Google Wallet, which will launch in the future for Android-powered smartphones. We’re not sure why Sprint has held out on joining ISIS, but we hope it jumps on board soon to save consumers from a fragmented mobile payment landscape. Read on for the full press release.

Isis Forms Relationships with Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express

Isis Becomes the First and Only Mobile Commerce Platform with Full Support of All Four National Payment Networks

Aspen, Colorado — July 19, 2011: Isis, the national mobile commerce joint venture between AT&T Mobility, T-Mobile USA and Verizon Wireless, today announced that Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express will join Isis in making mobile commerce a reality for millions of U.S. consumers and merchants. Isis’ relationships with all four payment networks mean that with Isis-enabled phones and payment terminals in place, merchants and consumers will have ubiquity and freedom of choice when it comes to payment network acceptance.

“Since the formation of Isis in November, we have been committed to building a mobile commerce platform that aligns and advances the interests of consumers, merchants and banks,” said Michael Abbott, chief executive officer for Isis. “By working with the nation’s payment networks – Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express – we significantly advance the vision of an open and secure platform that provides banks and merchants with a new and highly relevant way to connect with consumers.”

Today’s announcement underscores Isis’ inclusive approach, providing all critical stakeholders – banks, merchants and consumers – with the freedom and choice necessary to foster a robust new industry and make mobile commerce a reality.

“Visa has long championed an open approach to mobile commerce that allows consumers to choose which account they want to enable for mobile payments,” said Joe Saunders, chief executive officer, Visa Inc. “We are committed to working closely with Isis, handset manufacturers, platform providers and financial institutions to offer consumers a suite of mobile services – mobile payments, coupons tailored to location and lifestyle, real time account information and more.”

Earlier this year, Isis announced Salt Lake City, Utah and Austin, Texas as initial launch markets, slated to roll out in the first half of 2012 with support from all four payment networks.

“We fully support an open commerce ecosystem which will drive the scale necessary for widespread adoption of mobile payments, providing consumers with exciting new possibilities for shopping and saving,” said Ajay Banga, president and chief executive officer, MasterCard Worldwide. “Our work with Isis reinforces MasterCard’s commitment to the continued development, innovation and evolution of mobile payments technologies.”

Isis will bring mobile commerce to consumers and merchants by using mobile phones to make point-of-sale purchases through the use of near-field communication (NFC) technology. Isis will offer customers a secure and convenient way to pay, redeem coupons and store merchant loyalty cards, all with the tap of a phone.

“Discover has been working with Isis from the start to facilitate mobile commerce, which will provide added convenience and benefits to consumers while delivering increased loyalty and sales to merchants,” said David W. Nelms, chairman and chief executive officer for Discover. “Isis’ open strategy is the right approach to establishing a highly secure environment for mobile commerce that will be achieved through the participation of banks and payment networks like Discover.”

Since its formation, Isis has had a strong vested interest in generating industry involvement and support for a mobile commerce platform that is open and inclusive by design. By working with all four payment networks, Isis will set the standard for what it means to be open, secure and reliable in the mobile commerce industry.

“Isis is able to bring choice and opportunity to mobile commerce by helping cardmembers bring the cards in their leather wallet onto their mobile device,” said Bill Glenn, president, Global Merchant Services, American Express. “This relationship is another way for American Express to expand the digital experience in the social marketplace. As the line between online and offline continues to blur, American Express is leveraging our digital closed loop to help connect our merchant network with our cardmembers in any environment.”

12 Comments
  • http://twitter.com/cdoruff Collin Doruff

    What does this mean to the average consumer?

    • Anonymous

      It means more convenience. It also means that losing your cell phone will suck even more. Overall, I’m in favor.

      • http://twitter.com/yyandrew Andrew Yang

        Yeah, it means that security for smartphone operating systems will have to be air-tightened and smartphone owners will have to approach their daily usage of their phones differently (e.g. passcode lock, password protected apps, no accessible trace of secure data).

      • http://twitter.com/cdoruff Collin Doruff

        I think ill hang onto my wallet for a while longer.

  • Anonymous

    I’m just glad ODIN didn’t get the contract. 

  • gtate

    Looking forward to this, won’t have to carry these plastic cards around.

  • Anonymous

    Nice to see that everybody is involved with this. Go go competition!

    Surprised to see Sprint’s not in this, though. 

  • Mps

    Glad all the carriers and payment networks came to an agreement before Apple developed their proprietary iPayment solution for their 100 million devices. 

  • Ilibbus

    Isis: the official mobile payment system of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

  • http://twitter.com/yyandrew Andrew Yang

    “fragmented mobile payment landscape”? Really? Two different options for mobile payments by the major carriers is the cause for fragmentation concern? Try – healthy competition.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_3PIN25VANYYZZKJMWWQECGHM34 Ada Flores

    I paid $32.67 for a XBOX 360 and my mom got a 17 inch Sony laptop for $94.83 being delivered to our house tomorrow by FedEX. I will never again pay expensive retail prices at stores. I even sold a 46 inch HDTV to my boss for $650 and it only cost me $52.78 to get. Here is the website we using to get all this stuff, PennyJump.com

  • http://www.techendeavour.com/ Suresh_Babu

    With the biggest 3 carriers
    teaming up with ISIS for NFC payments, Sprint was left out to be caught by
    Google for its NFC payment program. This new mobile payment service will mean
    that consumers will be able to pay for goods and redeem handsets via specially
    equipped NFC cash registers. With this update, I am feeling that iphone also
    will get itself NFC capable in future. 

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