Great news. Mobile payment is garbage regardless. I don't know why some are hoping for it to suceed.
And honestly will all 3 apps basically the same, I'm still more bullish on Samsung pay after trying it out. I can use it in way more places than the other apps, not just newer stores that accept NFC.
I never quite understand the crowd that is shocked, shocked that security-conscious features (like payments or workplace device management) forbid you from doing things that inherently weaken your phone's security.
It's like arguing that you can be a top athlete while eating a diet consisting solely of pizza and ice cream. Sorry, but the two ideas are mutually incompatible. If you want one, you're going to have to give up the other.
Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, and Android Pay all use the same rails which include much stronger cardholder verification, tokenization, and dynamic crytograms which give merchants freedom from liability. Google Wallet transactions did not - they basically were just a different way of giving merchants a card number without any additional protection.
Since these new payment methods actually give fraud protection, that means any weakness in the entire payment chain could compromise it. Mods that let you mimic other device profiles, etc would break security.
So if you want to mod/root/jailbreak, that's fine, but understand why you can't use these new payment apps. It's not Google, the credit card companies and payment networks would refuse to let their cards be used and take liability otherwise.
And honestly will all 3 apps basically the same, I'm still more bullish on Samsung pay after trying it out. I can use it in way more places than the other apps, not just newer stores that accept NFC.
Yeah, not only a root check, and an Xposed check, but it requires a full signed ROM. What is this crap?
There's no reason it can't work both ways. Whoever's liable for fraud should dictate the security. If it worked as a prepaid debit, *I* would be liable for fraud, and should be able to use it(anonymously) on any machine I choose. People that choose to be backed by a company can live with restrictions.
It could, but it probably won't, if we're realistic about it.
Most of these systems are built to use conventional credit and debit cards, and those companies will insist that users can't easily compromise the transaction process. The prepaid debit card providers would likely want to go for separate apps to avoid restrictions from other providers, and it's doubtful they'll do that when the audience for that (people with rooted Android phones + prepaid debit cards) is rather small.
There's no reason it can't work both ways. Whoever's liable for fraud should dictate the security. If it worked as a prepaid debit, *I* would be liable for fraud, and should be able to use it(anonymously) on any machine I choose. People that choose to be backed by a company can live with restrictions.
Umm, you're proposing that consumers themselves be liable for any fraud on that credit card if used on a rooted device? First, practically no consumers would accept that and if you are, you're in a incredibly small minority. Secondly the opt-in and acceptance of those types of terms would be a compliance nightmare (We detect your device is rooted, click Yes to accept liability for all transactions?). I can already see the lawsuits about "I didn't understand what Yes meant, I should get my money back".
Secondly, it still breaks the ecosystem. What if your credentials somehow get copied onto another device and used. Should you also then be liable? How would the company truly distinguish between your rooted devices and a bad actor?
For better or for worse (but certainly better for merchants), this is the future of payments.
With prepaid cards, you lose what you have on the cards; usually a couple hundred $. They aren't unlimited like credit, or maybe debit if you foolishly link a card to a well funded account. Some people are willing to take responsibility for their own security, and setting it up should be trivial from a program perspective, and of absolutely no concern from a merchant perspective.
Time: Usain Bolt Ate 100 Chicken McNuggets a Day in Beijing and Somehow Won Three Gold MedalsIt's like arguing that you can be a top athlete while eating a diet consisting solely of pizza and ice cream. Sorry, but the two ideas are mutually incompatible. If you want one, you're going to have to give up the other.
My bank doesn't support android pay. Is there a way to block the wallet from updating and forcing me to move to the android pay app?
Yeah, not only a root check, and an Xposed check, but it requires a full signed ROM. What is this crap?
Time: Usain Bolt Ate 100 Chicken McNuggets a Day in Beijing and Somehow Won Three Gold Medals
In the ten days Bolt spent in Beijing, he downed approximately 1,000 nuggets, averaging 100 a day. At 940 calories per 20-piece box, that means that Usain ate about 4,700 calories worth of Chicken McNuggets a day and 47,000 calories over the course of his stay in China. (And thats without Sweet N Sour Sauce, which, lets face it, only a fool would pass up.)
At first, I ate a box of 20 for lunch, then another for dinner, Usain writes in his soon-to-be released autobiography Faster than Lightning. The next day I had two boxes for breakfast, one for lunch and then another couple in the evening. I even grabbed some fries and an apple pie to go with it.
I will tell you what it is, a HUGE win for the OnePlus Two is what it is. Turns out NFC is useless to the hacking crowd.
What did you expect? I'll bet that a pin code/pattern is needed too.
If root would be allowed then any lost phone could have its cc info swiped, then panic would ensue and google would be bashed for this "vulnerability".
My device is encrypted, rooted, and the boot loader is locked.Umm, you're proposing that consumers themselves be liable for any fraud on that credit card if used on a rooted device? First, practically no consumers would accept that and if you are, you're in a incredibly small minority. Secondly the opt-in and acceptance of those types of terms would be a compliance nightmare (We detect your device is rooted, click Yes to accept liability for all transactions?). I can already see the lawsuits about "I didn't understand what Yes meant, I should get my money back".
Secondly, it still breaks the ecosystem. What if your credentials somehow get copied onto another device and used. Should you also then be liable? How would the company truly distinguish between your rooted devices and a bad actor?
For better or for worse (but certainly better for merchants), this is the future of payments.
I thought there was a way to bring old cards over if they were from a bank that wasn't supported. I'm not sure about the exact process but I believe there is a way.
My device is encrypted, rooted, and the boot loader is locked.
How likely can it be copied even with the device being encrypted(with a different password from the normal unlock password/pin), boot loader locked, and password/pin on?