The Chinese government is looking to crack down on mobile payments and crowdfunding in an effort to control more online commerce.
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The Chinese government is looking to crack down on mobile payments and crowdfunding in an effort to control more online commerce.
Cabbies in the UK and Ireland are embracing a new mobile payment solution to make hailing taxis easier for customers.
It hasn’t been easy getting restaurants to embrace mobile payments, but maybe this will get their attention: mobile payments make restaurant goers tip more and spend more.
Forward-thinking Scandinavian countries are leading the way yet again—this time with access to mobile payments.
Online restaurant reservation site OpenTable has teamed up with NCR Corporation to expand mobile payments to the reservation app.
WeChat has swelled to 549 million MAUs, and parent company Tencent has seen its total MAUs explode by 39 percent on a year-over-year basis.
With its own problems in the mobile payments space in the US, retail juggernaut Walmart is looking to play nice with Alibaba as it targets China.
Global money transfer giant Xoom has expanded to Sri Lanka, where it will begin offering instant money transfers to people living in the country.
Most people in the western world don’t know it, but the most cutting edge mobile technologies aren’t in Silicon Valley; they’re in places like rural China, Africa, and India.
Startups continue to appify everything, and now another startup is taking a crack at replacing the restaurant waiter with an app.
While Uber faces pushback from authorities domestic and abroad, cities like Bangkok are partnering to bring Uber-like features to their taxis.