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Galaxy Nexus 'Google Wallet' Feature Blocked By Verizon

Galaxy Nexus Google Wallet

PETER SVENSSON   12/ 6/11 02:17 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Verizon Wireless is blocking Google's new flagship phone from supporting Google's attempt to make the smartphone the credit card of the future.

In blocking the Google Wallet software from running on the new Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Verizon Wireless said Tuesday that it was holding off on providing a wallet application until it can offer "the best security and user experience." Verizon and rivals AT&T Inc. and T-Mobile USA are part of a consortium called ISIS that is planning its own payment system.

Google confirmed that Verizon had asked it not to include the wallet function in the Galaxy Nexus phone, due out soon.

The way Google Wallet is supposed to work, the phone can be used to pay for merchandise in some stores, by tapping it to payment terminals.

Google calls the payment application a "wallet" because it can be loaded with payment "cards" from multiple sources. Right now, there are only two cards available: Citibank MasterCards and a prepaid card issued by Google. But Google is making the wallet available to any financial institution that wants to participate.

Google's plan is to make money by acting as a conduit between merchants and shoppers, using the Wallet as a way to deliver advertising and coupons. It's competing not only with ISIS, but with Visa and MasterCard, which have their own wallet projects, and with eBay Inc.'s PayPal.

The Galaxy Nexus is the latest iteration of the Nexus line, which showcases new features and capabilities for phones running Google's Android software. In this case, the phone is the first to run a new version of Android, dubbed "Ice Cream Sandwich."

The previous Nexus phone, sold by Sprint Nextel Corp., is the only phone yet to work with the Google Wallet application. Sprint is not part of ISIS.

U.S. phone companies effectively have veto rights on features sported by the phones they sell. Because of the clout Apple Inc. has gained by making the world's most popular smartphone, it has been able to turn that around and dictate terms to carriers. Google doesn't have the same leverage. It tried selling the first Nexus phone on its own, without going through the carriers, but ended that experiment because of weak sales.

Congress and regulators have occasionally raised questions about carriers blocking specific third-party applications. These days, carriers generally don't block applications directly, leaving it to Apple and Google to police their app stores.

Verizon Wireless spokesman Jeffrey Nelson said the company doesn't block applications, but Google Wallet is different because it accesses a security chip in the phone.

Examinations by Wired and other publications reveal that the international version of the Galaxy Nexus has the "Near-Field Communications" chip necessary to run Google Wallet. It's unclear whether the U.S. version will be lacking the chip or whether it will simply be blocked from running the Wallet application. Samsung Electronics had no immediate comment.

Google and Verizon Wireless united in 2009 to push Android phones as the major alternative to the iPhone. Verizon Wireless' "Droid" advertising campaign set the tone, to the extent that many people still call all Android phones "Droids." The Google-Verizon Wireless relationship has cooled this year, as the carrier started selling the iPhone.

Verizon Wireless is a joint venture of Verizon Communications Inc. of New York and Vodafone Group PLC of Britain.

Verizon Wireless' refusal of the Google Wallet was reported earlier on Computerworld's blog.

___

Peter Svensson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/petersvensson

Take a look at Google 4.0's biggest new features (below), many of which the Galaxy Nexus will showcase.
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NEW YORK — Verizon Wireless is blocking Google's new flagship phone from supporting Google's attempt to make the smartphone the credit card of the future. In blocking the Google Wallet software...
NEW YORK — Verizon Wireless is blocking Google's new flagship phone from supporting Google's attempt to make the smartphone the credit card of the future. In blocking the Google Wallet software...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dino213aa
11:00 PM on 12/07/2011
I find it so strange that Verizon tries to push its own video and navigation content on smartphone users. Why would I pay Verizon $10/month for navigation services I can get for free from Google? Same goes for video. People must be using these services for Big Red to keep forcing them onto smartphones.. but it just confounds me as to WHO actually uses them??
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RemoveTheGreedyOnes
This space is intentionally left blank...
08:22 PM on 12/06/2011
Bah, this is a non issue. All you have to do is change the setting which allows the installation of third party apps and you can get it. Either that or just root the phone...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
menschmaschine5
04:54 PM on 12/06/2011
Whether or not you like the idea of NFC payments, shame on Verizon for its anti-competitive practices here. Blocking Google Wallet to make room for its own as-yet-unreleased NFC app is pretty restrictive.

Luckily, those who want GW will probably be able to sideload it.
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lcr999
scientist
08:30 PM on 12/06/2011
Time for wireless and ISP providers to get out of the content business. They should be dumb pipes. I don't want verizon to make choices for me anymore than I want time-warner to make choices.
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
02:50 PM on 12/06/2011
By all means let me load all my financial data on my phone so that I don't have to be weighed down carrying that massive debit card.
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Eris23
Justice is in indefinite detention.
04:34 PM on 12/06/2011
Haha! :)
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09:35 PM on 12/06/2011
LOL
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portfolio
money is the barometer of a society's virtue
02:38 PM on 12/06/2011
I understand that the phone as credit card is common in Japan.

I also have heard that major security flaws have been found in it.
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09:36 PM on 12/06/2011
I've heard the same thing.....first hand, from my cousins in Tokyo and Yokohama.
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09:37 PM on 12/06/2011
I forgot to add, Japanese are pretty honest people by and large. Imagine THIS country, on the other hand, and what can happen.
01:26 PM on 12/06/2011
Allow AT&T to manage my personal financial information? Where do I sign?
01:22 PM on 12/06/2011
I would imagine that you can still side load the Google Wallet app into the Galaxy Nexus. It should still work...
02:13 PM on 12/06/2011
Root it and problems are solved...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mairs
Four legs, good.
12:56 PM on 12/06/2011
So if this payment system is set up, then someone who steals your Android phone have also stolen your wallet? How nice. How about this....keep your phone and your payment options... cash, credit cards.. separate and not let phone makers and carriers help themselves to a percentage from the purchases you make.
01:01 PM on 12/06/2011
I'm sure they have passwords, or pins available for privacy. And wouldn't loosing your wallet be worse? It's a greater chance of identity theft than loosing your phone with Google Wallet on it.
http://gbstechnews.com/
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mairs
Four legs, good.
01:29 PM on 12/06/2011
I've lost my phone three times over the last 15 years, but never my wallet. Maybe that's just me.

Credit card issuers have of course made a percentage of every card purchase for years now. I take credit cards in my business. The phone thing looks like just another way to wean people even further from paying with cash or checks, something that costs merchants nothing to accept, into yet another form of paying that will incur a fee for the merchant.