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Google CEO Teases New Phone That Aims To Replace Credit Cards

MICHAEL LIEDTKE   11/15/10 09:13 PM ET   AP

Google Eric Schmidt

SAN FRANCISCO — Google Inc. is taking another stab at designing a game-changing mobile phone, this time by including a built-in payment system that could eventually enable the devices to replace credit cards.

The new phone got a brief preview Monday when Google CEO Eric Schmidt took the stage to kick off the Web 2.0 summit, a technology conference held annually in San Francisco.

Schmidt confirmed that Google has been working on a sophisticated new computer chip and an upgrade of its Android mobile operating system that will include a payment processing tool. He showed off the new phone with the device's name and manufacturer concealed.

Several technology websites have speculated the new phone will be called "Nexus S" and will be manufactured by Samsung Electronics Co.

Google unveiled a phone called the Nexus One with much fanfare at the beginning of this year, but stopped selling it several months ago after other similar devices powered by Android hit the market. Samsung already makes several phones that run on Android software and just introduced a new computer tablet called Galaxy that's powered by Google's 3-year-old mobile operating system.

Schmidt declined to address the reports about the Nexus S. He indicated the new phone, equipped with the upgraded version of Android software called "Gingerbread," will hit the market within the next few weeks.

The new phone will feature a Near Field Communication, or NFC, chip that will enable phones to transmit the payment information of the device's owner to vendors using compatible technology. The transactions will be completed by tapping a physical point, such as a payment terminal or other objects encoded with the information needed to complete the purchase.

Schmidt said the chip will be more secure than the magnetic stripes that carry personal information on credit cards, an advantage that has been greeted enthusiastically by payment processors.

Google intends to forge partnerships with payment processors rather than try to expand into that line of commerce, Schmidt said. Although he expects mobile phones to supplant credit cards, Schmidt said the transition is still a long ways off.

"I still expect to be using credit cards for many, many years," he told reporters after his presentation. As computer chips and mobile software continues to improve, Schmidt envisions the day when phones will be able to alert their owners when they are passing by a merchant with a product or service on their shopping list.

Mobile phones powered by Android have become ubiquitous since Google released the free mobile software two years ago. HTC Corp., which made the Nexus One, and Motorola Inc. are among the other major manufacturers that have developed Android handsets. The widespread usage helped Android surge to a 25.5 percent share of the market for mobile phone software, up from 3.5 percent a year ago, according to the research firm Gartner Inc. That ranked Android's software second only to the Symbian operating system, a staple on Nokia Corp. phones, which holds a nearly 37 percent share, by Gartner's reckoning.

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SAN FRANCISCO — Google Inc. is taking another stab at designing a game-changing mobile phone, this time by including a built-in payment system that could eventually enable the devices to replace...
SAN FRANCISCO — Google Inc. is taking another stab at designing a game-changing mobile phone, this time by including a built-in payment system that could eventually enable the devices to replace...
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05:54 PM on 11/17/2010
Wow, what amazing new technology................. that they've had in Japan for like four years.
06:03 AM on 11/17/2010
"I know about the Nokia part, but didn't know credit cards weren't used. Wow, I never carry cash, I use my debit for everything, so much easier (and I can also see online where each penny went which is nice)."

Paying cash, nobody knows where each penny went, which is nicer.

But of course debit cards are widely used in Europe, credit cards not so much at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnUSA
04:07 AM on 11/17/2010
blippy.com will have a field day. Or chapter 11.
07:28 PM on 11/16/2010
Can we please stop with the buzzword "gamechanger"? I'm begging you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gwj2000
07:17 PM on 11/16/2010
I saw this technology some months ago, and I have lots of trepidation. Security holes all over the place! RFID for one, and 4G LTE is not going to be the answer to all of our mobile data problems, especially when it comes to security.
02:15 PM on 11/16/2010
too little too late
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JasonMcl
8(Na) + 8(Na) = BACHMAN
04:43 PM on 11/16/2010
Your post? Agreed.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
zelduh
Democrats: the REAL American patriots.
01:55 PM on 11/16/2010
I wonder if it will be going into the cutting-edge Android tablets that are about to be unleashed on the markets in the next couple months....

I, personally, am waiting to pick up the Adam by Notion Ink. http://notionink.wordpress.com/
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ResearchtheFacts
02:34 PM on 11/16/2010
It is a little odd looking for a tab.
01:30 PM on 11/16/2010
I think the payment system is a great idea. You can tell technology is really speeding up- this time we're only 7-10 years behind Japan! Before it was much more then that, particularly with cell phones. Flip phones? Yeah they beat us. Big ol' screen phones? Try 8 years ago.

Teasing Google aside, I think this is pretty cool. I've been waiting for this. I can't believe that in a paperless world (unless you're a business...) I still have to carry around a wallet with multiple CCs, Giant (and other) cards, AAA or whatever card, a drivers license, ....maybe cash if i'm feeling old fashioned. It's ridiculous. [insert online retailer here] can save my CC info...why can't my phone?

100 gabillion bit encryption + PIN number. Woot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
02:35 PM on 11/16/2010
It is already being done by apple only they use bright icon pics to disguise their intent. lol
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JasonMcl
8(Na) + 8(Na) = BACHMAN
01:18 PM on 11/16/2010
To anyone curious as to what is actually important about the Nexus S (the phone he is holding):

The idea behind this phone is that you get to have Samsung's technology running the latest and purest version of Android with no third party interference of any kind. The Updates go straight from Google to your phone without the need for your carrier or manufacturer to mess with them.

The combination of a stock Android phone with the latest and greatest Samsung Processor and Display would be enough to satisfy all the more die hard users.

Never-mind the pay system that won't be viable for 10 years or so. This phone may well be the perfect Droid depending on its final specs.
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J242
Micro-bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro-bio!
12:53 PM on 11/16/2010
Hmmm, am I the only one who sees a huge potential for danger in this? If your credit card is stolen, a call to the bank, or a visit to their website to report it stolen and it's automatically deactivated and a new one is in the mail to you. If your cell phone gets stolen and it held important financial data such as account information, they could sit on that for months before using it and assault your account. Plus, replacing a credit card (while it may take a few days to come in the mail) doesn't cost the hundreds of dollars that replacing a cell phone does. Even if your carrier remotely bricks your stolen phone, you can get around that quite easily.
01:15 PM on 11/16/2010
I could be wrong, but from things I have read before with similar things. I know at one point I read that a version of the iPhone (was supposed to be iPhone 4 if I remember) was going to have a RFID that could have payment info imbeded. It would be used similar to the credit cards you can pass over the payment pad. You would have the option to require a pin to activate it on your phone. Plus it wouldn't replace your credit card, just be like a second copy. If your phone was lost or stolen, someone would need the pin to use it, and even if you are still worried, you can have that RFID canceled the same way you would a stolen credit card. Now I don't know how convienient it would be at this time since not everyone excepts wireless credit cards, but secuirty isn't much more of a concern that it already is.
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J242
Micro-bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro-bio!
03:11 PM on 11/16/2010
The one problem I have with secure information over RFID is it's incredibly easy to capture the transaction data. All it takes is around $150 worth of hardware and some time setting it up just right. RFID is awesome for little things like having your fridge know if something is close to it's expiration date or tracking volume of inventory in a commercial or retail environment but I'm not comfortable with my banking info being transmitted over the air. Back at e-home (On MS campus) they have demonstrations of advanced RFID tech and it's frightening how easy it is to capture and log all of the information (even when encrypted!) with very little effort.

I'm a complete geek and am all for advancement of technology and I'm not saying it's going to be a bad thing outright, I'm just concerned about the possibilities of abuse is all.
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jasonsabio
02:46 PM on 11/16/2010
Both iPhones and Android phones offer services that allow for a remote wipe... meaning if your your phone is stolen you can visit a website and clear every bit if data off your phone. Then you don't have to wait for a new card to be sent in the mail, you can just add the info to your new phone.
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J242
Micro-bio? We don't need no stinkin' micro-bio!
03:13 PM on 11/16/2010
Again, you have to get a new phone, much more of a hassle (both in time and cost) than replacing a card. Also, if you look into the iOS SDK a "remote wipe" only labels all previous space as available and compresses then encrypts the remaining amount. It's still accessible to those with the intent to get to your data. The only way to completely wipe the phone is to completely flash the memory and overwrite all available memory repeatedly.
12:34 PM on 11/16/2010
YAWN.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
RattleCat
Part of the Mittless Protection Program
12:15 PM on 11/16/2010
My credit cards already work fine.

How about improving the phone part?
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JasonMcl
8(Na) + 8(Na) = BACHMAN
01:23 PM on 11/16/2010
Well that is the whole point really. You have Samsung's technology paired with a pure Stock Android and that is a very attractive combination.

As far as the specs on the phone nobody knows yet, but it will at the very least be just as powerful as a Galaxy S, yet even more so with the stock build.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
zelduh
Democrats: the REAL American patriots.
01:48 PM on 11/16/2010
The phone is not the problem; the infrastructure that communicates with the phone is the problem. If you switch from AT&T to either Verizon or T-Mobile, it will be a significant improvement.

Most folks have no problems with their Android phones.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kinogod
word farmer
11:46 AM on 11/16/2010
Near field will be on all iphone 5's. Design an ecosystem for the google b4 you step outsode the device into the larger world and then maybe you'd have some competish with apple. These companies just dont get their competish. Another DOA handset from a company rhat can make cars drive hands free. Think bigger guys and invest 10billion in a home for your dvices, make content deals with all the major entertainment sources and then ergonomically make a jewel we adore. Harder than it looks. Then crash the conscoiusness of the consumer and make them crave....

Next--
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JasonMcl
8(Na) + 8(Na) = BACHMAN
01:26 PM on 11/16/2010
"Another DOA handset from a company rhat can make cars drive hands free."

Did you type this while driving?

"Design an ecosystem for the google b4 you step outsode the device into the larger world and then maybe you'd have some competish with apple"

I have no idea what you are trying to say in this post. But Android has more than competed with Apple, in case you missed the headlines they have surpassed them both in new sales and market share this year and the figures keep going up.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
zelduh
Democrats: the REAL American patriots.
01:34 PM on 11/16/2010
I have to agree with you on this. I LOVE my Android phone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jasonsabio
02:50 PM on 11/16/2010
...it'll be on the iPhone 5, fully 6-8 months AFTER Android. Seems to me like the Android/Google ecosystem is doing just fine and actually evolving and growing at a much faster pace.
11:28 AM on 11/16/2010
Just like the Japanese phones 10 years ago? Nice.
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crayola 08b
i'm just a little crayon in a big box.
10:56 AM on 11/16/2010
this is pretty much a given as far as where smartphones are headed. apple is already working on a similar system for their next gen iPhone. though due to apple's yearly update cycle google may beat them to it since we don't expect the 5th gen iphone til summer 2011.
11:15 AM on 11/16/2010
Nokia has this on the market for how long, maybe 4 years already?
Only thing is in Europe nobody uses credit cards, whereas in the USA nobody uses Nokia.

http://europe.nokia.com/find-products/devices/nokia-6131-nfc/technical-specifications
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crayola 08b
i'm just a little crayon in a big box.
12:10 PM on 11/16/2010
LOL. funny and true on both counts.
01:18 PM on 11/16/2010
I know about the Nokia part, but didn't know credit cards weren't used. Wow, I never carry cash, I use my debit for everything, so much easier (and I can also see online where each penny went which is nice).