- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.zip
They just transitioned to Google Wallet, which lacks some features, notably peer-to-peer transactions. The API for virtual banking cards that most banking apps use instead of including their own NFC driver, also called “Google Pay”, will keep working. At least that’s how I understand it.
I mean, Venmo is a thing. Google Wallet /GPay is just so I don’t have to take out my wallet to pay TBH.
naming is essential
if you make and kill four separate apps all called variations around “google pay” there’s a tiny chance people gets confused
A lot of people hear the app is dead and assume they no longer can tap to pay and just stop doing it altogether. My mom’s like that.
Exactly. At the end of the day, naming is not that relevant as long as it conveys the message of what the app does. It only gets confusing when you have a bunch of apps doing the same thing
Google isn’t interested in good UX, so they prioritize the next “new” internally to their staff. This is the end result. It’s why I switched from Android (and I was pretty huge fanboy in my teens haha) to iOS. Apples got its own issues but the user experience end to end is leagues ahead. Phones don’t innovate anymore so in the end I just want a solid pocket computer with a great camera.
I’m confused just by this announcement. +1 to that.
Edit: I thought wallet was “pay”.
Tell that to Microsoft as well
Google often feels like a disorganized company with constantly shifting priorities, and a big reason behind that is the lack of top-down initiatives from the CEO. That means the real driving force behind most projects at Google are mid-level executives who show up with grand plans and then leave—either in disgrace or triumph—when those initial plans run their course.
Makes a lot of sense. There doesn’t seem to be a unifying strategy behind anything google does. I also think theres a vicious circle going on here: google has a loyalty problem, which could be solved by long term thinking, usually done by loyal employees, but employees don’t stick around long enough.
It isn’t a problem with long term employees. The problem is that promotion at Google typically relies on developing new products. Long term employees aren’t incentivized to improve existing products.
Oh that’s interesting, I wasn’t aware of this. Is it an unspoken policy? Or its an over reliance on “innovation first” pseudo-management?
I think it’s more like a pattern observed in many of the blog posts about the reasons ex-employees left Google after a while.
I think it was a mistake for Google to jump into AI last minute. I think they should of offered separate AI products and let growth happen naturally. Meanwhile Microsoft and OpenAI will shoot themselves in the foot.
Being a normal non AI focused company would of been a good look. They could simply have some basic AI tools that are actually useful.
I thought Google Pay and Google Wallet were the same app. No wonder it died. Though, I’m not sure if it ever worked here in the first place to be honest.
Removed by mod
Another one bites the dust?
I never use these apps, I just don’t trust them at all. In a world of cyber security worries, we put all of our financial info on an app and a phone and expect everything to be safe. I’m just old school. Safety over convenience… as I am In an uber. Lol
Phone payments are magnitudes more secure than card payments as they basically are equivalent to using a brand new card and throwing it away for each transaction (in simplified terms)
I’m just old school and I always think of a phone snatch. But I understand what you are saying.
It’s still safer. They can steal your wallet and pay for anything trivially. If they steal your phone, they have to be able to unlock it to pay with it.
It’s a valid point. I’m just not one to put all my eggs in one basket. That is just me.
…isn’t your card one basket full of your eggs?
Really the physical wallet. Or maybe that’s a basket full of baskets lol
You still need biometrics, passwords, pins.
I get the nerves, but I can’t find any reasonable way it’s less secure
Fair enough… I’ll just pay with IOU’s 😂😂😂😂
You should look up info about phone payments and temp card numbers in order to reduce some of your fears. Also, check out what is actually stored in epay apps when there’s a connection through a provider, like a bank integration or an integration to another epay partner.
PCI security is about as high as you’d expect from companies that tell consumers they won’t lose their own money to fraud. When it’s the bank’s money, you’d better believe they care.
There are far easier ways to get someone’s money and this ain’t it.