What tech will make irrelevant for the class of 2035, plus all the payments news you missed last week.

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Sat - October 21, 2017


JUST RELEASED: The State Of The Buy Button


Visa Launches Authentication Ecosystem: Visa ID Intelligence


The Trickle Down Theory Of Push Payments


TRENDING: The Role Of Pop-Up Shops In Driving Omnicommerce


Before You Use The Word 'Deep,' Show Me The Learning


Mastercard Bids Goodbye To The Signature


How To Succeed In (Chinese) Business Without Really Trying


TRENDING: Is A 'Mom and Pop' Image Bad For Credit Unions?


Q3 Earnings: Amex, BAC, Samsung


Chase Acquires WePay


PayPal Posts 218M Active Users And 17M Merchants


Pay With Venmo Launches At 2M Merchants


In Financial Services Innovation, Disruption Isn’t Everything


eBay’s Rough Earnings Ride


How Payments, In Context, Become Events


Rethinking The Role Of The ATM


The Startup That’s Using AI To Take On The Grocery Giants


Why The ICBA Doesn’t Want Square To Be A Bank


Kroger’s Secret Ingredient In 2018: Data


Why APIs Are The Beginning — Not The End


Why Suppliers Are Key For B2B ePayments Adoption


In Payments, For Consumers, Form (Factor) Follows Function


One Food-Ordering App To Rule Them All


Trulioo’s CEO On Solving Payments' KYB Problem


Rambus CTO On Tokenization, Part Deux


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What Tech Will Make Irrelevant For The Class of 2035
 

Kids born in 2017 are being born into a totally different world, learning a new set of digital skills while never learning the analog ones on which their parents and grandparents rely. It’s possible that driving, whipping out a plastic card to pay at a store, signing a sales receipt, writing in cursive and even creating passwords will sound as antiquated to them as filling a kerosene lamp or riding a horse to work. And, it’s a future we can watch under construction.

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Why It’s Time To Shut Down Cryptocurrencies
 

Jamie Dimon says Bitcoin’s “stupid,” but the head of the IMF says cryptocurrencies could be the future of money. After all, investors have dumped $1.7 billion into them over the last eight years. Karen Webster says it’s time to just shut them all down, though. Too many people conflate cryptocurrencies with the only way to innovate the movement of money around the world, forgetting that digitizing money is how trillions and trillions of dollars have moved securely worldwide for decades. They’re also forgetting that creating cryptocurrencies only comes in handy when its issuers want to evade existing regulations.

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