- From: Anders Rundgren <anders.rundgren.net@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 3 May 2019 09:15:19 +0200
- To: Adrian Hope-Bailie <adrian@coil.com>
- Cc: Ian Jacobs <ij@w3.org>, Web Payments Working Group <public-payments-wg@w3.org>, Adrian Hope-Bailie <adrian@hopebailie.com>, Nick Telford-Reed <nicktr@gmail.com>
On 2019-05-03 08:25, Adrian Hope-Bailie wrote: > Do you have a list of these so we can try and get them involved? Sure, I can easy come up with a list of 6-7 such vendors but they don't work with open standardization. This is why pretty obvious things like electronic receipts has become a vendor thing. To me this is rather a question for the W3C, should we bother about things that our members do not? Personally, I'm trying to decipher patterns in the market place. thanx, Anders > > On Fri, 3 May 2019 at 08:02, Anders Rundgren <anders.rundgren.net@gmail.com <mailto:anders.rundgren.net@gmail.com>> wrote: > > On 2019-05-01 18:14, Ian Jacobs wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > Minutes from today’s call: > > https://www.w3.org/2019/05/01-wpwg-minutes > > > > Next meeting: 15 May > > > > We will continue our work on the SRC description: > > https://github.com/w3c/src/wiki > > I can only speak for Europe but here practically all countries already have national mobile payment systems offering secure on-line payments. Unlike SRC most of these systems also work in physical shops as well as supporting P2P payments. > > That these systems only work on a national basis is a pity. In addition, NONE of the vendors I refer to are W3C members and NONE of them seem to be involved in standardization efforts either. > > It is pretty confusing, isn't it? :-) > > thanx, > Anders > > > > > Ian > > > > -- > > Ian Jacobs <ij@w3.org <mailto:ij@w3.org>> > > https://www.w3.org/People/Jacobs/ > > Tel: +1 718 260 9447 > > > > > > > > > > > >
Received on Friday, 3 May 2019 07:15:46 UTC