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Sat - November 4, 2017
TRENDING: Putting IT Professionals Through Cyberattack Boot Camp Getting Retailers To The Point Of No Returns Apple Closes In On $1 Trillion Market Cap Earnings RoundUp â The Big Ten: Including First Data, Shopify, Starbucks, MoneyGram and Western Union The New York Subwayâs Better Digital Ticket To Ride Theory Of Payments Evolution: EMV Will Get Better With Age Suppliers Faced With New Friction As More Invoices Get Paid Electronically Building Foundations For IoT Castles In The Cloud Things To Know: The Industries Getting Subscription Commerce Right (And Wrong) Whatâs Really Behind The 'Fab' In Fabletics? Facebook Crushes Expectations; Warns of Increased Costs Coming Soon Samsung Pay: From Mobile Payment Method To Commerce Enabler Millennial Entrepreneursâ Optimism Is Booming â Hereâs Their Top Concern Fraudsters And The Retail Identity Crisis NEW STUDY: Who Are The Financial Invisibles? Things To Know: Store Front Business Index Predictions Vs. Reality Finding The Right Loot For A Rarified Audience The Interoperable Omni TRENDING: How DraftKings Ups Its Payment Game Chase Finds Veterans Gearing Up To Sell Their Small Businesses Kelloggâs Taps Into The Stranger Side Of Commerce Mastercard Posts Biggest Revenue Jump All Year The Matchmaker Is In: Bootler, the Kayak Of Online Food Delivery KYC: Knowing Your (Onboarding) Costs Being (Artificially) Intelligent About High Fashion The FTC On Identity Fraudâs Biggest Threat Payday Lending Rules Seem Likely To Escape The CRA TRENDING: Lassoing Loyalty And Rewards Into One Mobile Program Millennials 'Feather' Their Nest With Furniture Subscriptions PYMNTS Talk Back: The Bitcoin Breakdown
TRENDING: Putting IT Professionals Through Cyberattack Boot Camp
Getting Retailers To The Point Of No Returns
Apple Closes In On $1 Trillion Market Cap
Earnings RoundUp â The Big Ten: Including First Data, Shopify, Starbucks, MoneyGram and Western Union
The New York Subwayâs Better Digital Ticket To Ride
Theory Of Payments Evolution: EMV Will Get Better With Age
Suppliers Faced With New Friction As More Invoices Get Paid Electronically
Building Foundations For IoT Castles In The Cloud
Things To Know: The Industries Getting Subscription Commerce Right (And Wrong)
Whatâs Really Behind The 'Fab' In Fabletics?
Facebook Crushes Expectations; Warns of Increased Costs Coming Soon
Samsung Pay: From Mobile Payment Method To Commerce Enabler
Millennial Entrepreneursâ Optimism Is Booming â Hereâs Their Top Concern
Fraudsters And The Retail Identity Crisis
NEW STUDY: Who Are The Financial Invisibles?
Things To Know: Store Front Business Index Predictions Vs. Reality
Finding The Right Loot For A Rarified Audience
The Interoperable Omni
TRENDING: How DraftKings Ups Its Payment Game
Chase Finds Veterans Gearing Up To Sell Their Small Businesses
Kelloggâs Taps Into The Stranger Side Of Commerce
Mastercard Posts Biggest Revenue Jump All Year
The Matchmaker Is In: Bootler, the Kayak Of Online Food Delivery
KYC: Knowing Your (Onboarding) Costs
Being (Artificially) Intelligent About High Fashion
The FTC On Identity Fraudâs Biggest Threat
Payday Lending Rules Seem Likely To Escape The CRA
TRENDING: Lassoing Loyalty And Rewards Into One Mobile Program
Millennials 'Feather' Their Nest With Furniture Subscriptions
PYMNTS Talk Back: The Bitcoin Breakdown
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Waiting For Apple X: The One Line People Donât Seem To Mind
The smartphone and apps have done a lot of amazing things to transform payments and commerce, like skipping the line by ordering ahead. Ironically, the tech giant that launched the very app store that gave birth to those skip-the-line apps has the one line its ardent fans donât seem to want to skip. Undeterred by the steep price tag, hundreds and even thousands of walk-in customers queued up outside each of Appleâs retail locations hours, days and, in some cases, months before the iPhone X hit shelves. But that's nothing new. Join us for a walk down Appleâs 10-year queue memory lane.
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Facebook: Too Big To Govern?
Facebook made a trip to Capitol Hill earlier this week to answer lawmakersâ questions about its role in letting the Russians use its platform to spread fake news, thus influencing the outcome of the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Karen Webster says the general issue of fake news and fake accounts on social media isnât all that new â but does raise some interesting concerns now regarding platform governance. For one, what happens when platform owners fail to balance the need to make money, the interests of their investors and the needs of their key stakeholders? And, when should regulators move in to fill the void?
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