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Australia Continues to Scrutinize Apple Pay Amid Push for Regulation

The government of Australia is considering creating new laws that could more heavily regulate digital payments systems such as Apple Pay, Google Pay, and WeChat Pay (via Reuters).

Apple Pay Feature
An Australian government-commissioned report into digital payments systems has made a number of recommendations, one of which suggested actively regulating ‌Apple Pay‌ and other similar digital payments services. Speaking to the Australian Financial Review, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said that the recommendations would be carefully considered:

Ultimately, if we do nothing to reform the current framework, it will be Silicon Valley alone that determines the future of our payments system, a critical piece of our economic infrastructure.

Under current Australian law, the likes of ‌Apple Pay‌ are not classified as payment systems, putting them outside payment regulations. Classifying ‌Apple Pay‌ as a payment system would clarify the regulatory status of digital wallets in Australia and allow the government to explicitly designate big tech companies as payment providers.

Other recommendations, contingent on classifying ‌Apple Pay‌ as a payment system, look to establish a strategy for the country's wider payments ecosystem with a single, integrated licensing framework.

Australian banks such as the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Commonwealth Bank of Australia have previously raised concerns around the growth of digital wallets with "competition issues" and purported safety implications. Earlier this year, an Australian Parliamentary Committee considered forcing Apple to open up the iPhone's NFC chip to support third-party payment systems in an effort to promote competition.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

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Top Rated Comments

Mrjetsondc Avatar
63 months ago
In other words, Visa and MC are crying and trying to flex their lobbying power.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Expos of 1969 Avatar
63 months ago
The Australian Government should have put a bit of effort into purchasing and administering vaccines rather than this perhaps...
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
63 months ago
If the Australian government doesn't like it, then Apple is doing something right.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
840quadra Avatar
63 months ago

"Ultimately, if we do nothing to reform the current framework, it will be Silicon Valley alone that determines the future of our payments system, a critical piece of our economic infrastructure."

Exactly this.
Also agree to open up NFC, as in, force Apple to open up NFC.
What would be the benefit of opening NFC?

Personally I am not 100% up to speed on the tech, but one of the biggest draws to a closed NFC and randomized payment system is the security. I don't want to go back to worrying about people cloning my CC after using a skimmer.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
miniyou64 Avatar
63 months ago
Government wanting their hand in everything despite the fact that they are without fail totally incompetent? Hmmm couldn’t be
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Wildkraut Avatar
63 months ago

What would be the benefit of opening NFC?

Personally I am not 100% up to speed on the tech, but one of the biggest draws to a closed NFC and randomized payment system is the security. I don't want to go back to worrying about people cloning my CC after using a skimmer.
The benefit is competition and an open payment infrastructure that does not depend of one or two payment providers.
You can still keep using ApplePay if you feel saver placing your bet on one horse, but a payment infrastructure must remain open. Apple is just building up another Gate in here.

NFC shall be usable by anyone who want's to access it, it's just a more complex barcode reader, nothing more.
But Apple is limiting the NFC chip access and pushing anticompetitive business practices further forward.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)