

T-Mobile Jumping Into the Check-Cashing Industry 211
An anonymous reader writes "T-Mobile has made headlines recently for trying to change the cellphone industry's reliance on contracts that lock customers into a particular carrier. Perhaps surprisingly, they've been fairly successful. Now, they're jumping into another industry plagued by high, customer-unfriendly fees: check cashing. 'Specifically, T-Mobile is hoping to offer an alternative for the 70 million or so U.S. adults that either have no bank account or have some bank services but still rely somewhat on check-cashing or payday-loan services.' How will they do it? 'Through the combination of a smartphone and a prepaid Visa debit card, T-Mobile (and its banking partner, Bancor) aims to offer many of the services typically offered through a bank, including check cashing, direct deposit and bill pay. The service, dubbed Mobile Money, allows customers to purchase and reload the card at more than 3,000 T-Mobile stores and, eventually, at Safeway and other retail stores. They can use the card anywhere Visa is accepted, and can also withdraw money, without a fee, at 42,000 ATMs across the country. Mobile Money customers can enroll in direct deposit for payroll, and personal checks and other types of checks can also be deposited by taking a picture of the check using the smartphone's camera.'"
Why do these exist (Score:2, Interesting)
In the US, most banks have free checking accounts. Why don't these people just use a bank?
Re: (Score:2)
The alternative to that is they don't want their money laying about where certain govt. agencies can remove it and deposit it elsewhere, such as the ex-wife's bank account.
Re: (Score:2)
This isn't the answer to that. You can bet it will be a simple matter for them to grab money from this system as well. Cash is still the best bet if you're shady. Until they do away with cash then it'll be a barter system.
Re: (Score:2)
You can't read genius. I am talking about people hiding money. You can't hide money in the system. That is why eventually the government will do away with cash, they know there are billions of dollars floating around that they aren't getting their cut on. Lot's of people work cash jobs just to avoid this situation. When cash is gone it'll be barter for them.
Re: (Score:2)
I personally have a hard time trusting banks, they want to hit you with fees all the time, but Chase has been doing very well with this card. I'm flabergasted by people who want to use their phone for banking. Hmmm, let me think of one company that rips off more people
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
The Chase liquid card won't charge you fees for overdrafting, because you can't overdraft. It will go negative slightly to cover you monthly fee
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Why do these exist (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
What I don't get is why would any company bother to deal with paper money and/or checks(?! good god, I think it was the 80's when I actually saw one last time).
Here in the "civilized" world (ie, the Great Satanic United States), paper checks are a definite reality. I consult on several jobs. Including State and Federal contracts. The US Federal system can direct deposit contractor funds, in fact they prefer to do so. The State of Alaska, not so much. City / County as well. So every couple of weeks I trundle down to the bank and give the nice teller person some paper things.
So, if you want a joyful trip down memory lane, bring your magnetic strip VISA card (n
Re: (Score:2)
They use a dated payroll system and haven't bothered to modernize. This is mainly just a symptom of "get off my lawn" or "why would I use that when this already works just fine" syndrome from older business owners, because using direct deposit is not only easier but it's also cheaper.
Re: (Score:2)
using direct deposit is not only easier but it's also cheaper.
If you have financial staff, sure. For a lot of small businesses the actual equation is: hire somebody to handle the payroll using direct deposit, or write out the checks myself.
Also if you're using a third-party payroll service, there is a bunch of extra work you have to do interfacing between the employee and the vendor, to get the (secret, sensitive) banking information from the employee to the vendor in a safe way. What is a safe way? How do you know if you're doing it right? You don't know if you're do
Re:Why do these exist (Score:5, Interesting)
There are a huge humber of people in the US who are simply unable to get a bank account. As far as the banking system is concerned, they do not exist. Ever see the movie, Elysium? It's like that.
It is tough to see when one is a privileged rich kid. I only learned about it when I picked up an interest in bitcoin and heard someone speak about what it meant for the poor to be able to hold wealth without a bank account and without having to carry cash.
Re: (Score:2)
There are a huge humber of people in the US who are simply unable to get a bank account.
My dad kept the same bank for 10 years after he lost his ID, because the tellers and the bank manager recognized him. When they closed the branch he went months without being able to get to his SS, because he didn't ask anybody for help. From his perspective he was being held down by The Man, and didn't think of that as being very notable, and it wasn't what he wanted to spend his time talking about.
I'd be surprised if this sort of situation doesn't cover over 1 million of those ~70 million bank-less Americ
Re: (Score:2)
How hard is it, exactly, to walk in to a credit union and walk out with a checkbook?
Remarkably hard, sometimes. I know someone with a steady employment record, good bill-paying history. Couldn't get a credit union account. Not enough debt.
Re: (Score:2)
But if you don't have a bank, how can you establish a banking record? Once you get to a certain age, it becomes a Catch-22. Can't bank because don't have credit record. Don't have credit record because can't use bank.
This is why my parents got me a low maximum credit card (~$500) when I was a teenager. Just to establish a credit record so I wouldn't have trouble getting a bank loan in the future.
Re: (Score:3)
But if you don't have a bank, how can you establish a banking record? Once you get to a certain age, it becomes a Catch-22. Can't bank because don't have credit record. Don't have credit record because can't use bank.
You show up in the bank with some money and tell them that you want to make a deposit. Couple of hundred bucks would do it. Banks love money. If on the other hand you show up with no money and ask for a credit, well than this is a different story. Did I say that banks love money?
Re: (Score:2)
Did you say you were willing to go hungry/get evicted/skip car repair and lose your job, so you can leave $200 at the bank? Not quite as detached as McDonald's holiday tip that their minimum wage workforce tip the pool boy, but sam
Re: (Score:2)
Perhaps you haven't seen the dysfunctional design of many cities in the US. Without a car to get you from the impoverished ghetto side of town to the side of town with minimum wage jobs, you don't have money for food either. The poor are stuck with large transport expenses --- keeping that twenty-year-old oil-burning junker fueled up and able to get across town --- because there is no public transit, or affordable housing near where the poor will be janitors and maids to the wealthier classes. With overall
Re:Why do these exist (Score:4, Insightful)
A car is a necessity for having a job in much of the country.
But that's the neat thing about being a Social Darwinist. You get to sneer at the poor applying for food stamps because they should get off their lazy asses and get a (second) job to pay for food and housing. But when they buy an 87 Escort, because they have to have transportation to get that job and that was the best car they could afford.....
......you get to sneer at them a second time for having a "luxury item" when they get hit with a $200 repair bill!
Re: (Score:2)
What you are missing is the social conditioning where they are told the car is a "necessity" because moving closer to work... is some kind of wimpy liberal thing to do, and the real reason they live so far from work is... public planning. And they can't ride a bicycle, because they're not a hippie and don't want the wind from the bicycle to give them dreadlocks.
Actually, going hungry is the one thing that is different than the others; hunger is a luxury for those too drunk to make it to the soup kitchen. Fo
Re: (Score:2)
And even if you are lucky enough to live on a good public transportation route, and so don't have to spend 4 hours a day on the bus, it probably doesn't run 24 hours a day. Which makes it a problem if the job you can find starts at 5 in the morning, or you have a night shift job that ends an hour after the last bus goes home for the night.
And even if you do live on a good transportation route that runs 24 hours a day, not everyone lives or works in a good neighborhood, where it's safe to walk 6 blocks at n
Re: (Score:2)
Um in case you don't remember, Cash For Clunkers was a limited program, both in terms of duration and number of vehicles accepted. Sorry to have interrupted your Social Darwinism, please feel free to resume sneering at the poor.
Re: (Score:2)
My bank (USAA) has no minimum balance on my checking account, but if you have a $1,000 or higher balance they pay you interest.
Re: (Score:2)
Check the policies of a lot of major banks --- they often require $1500+ balances to keep a free checking account; otherwise, it's $15+ fees per month (which will eat through your "couple hundred dollars" pretty quick).
I think you have bad luck with choosing banks. I have to have at least $1500/mo in direct deposits, but my balance drops down below $50 on a regular basis between paydays and averages probably $200 at the most (since i have all my bills send out immediately after the paycheck hits and usually do grocery/other shopping within a couple days after that). The account maintenance fees for not enough deposits is either $6.95 or $8.95/mo I believe. Certainly not more than $10. Overdraft fee is $29 a transaction I
Re: (Score:2)
Credit unions are required by law to restrict membership, but some try to make it as broad as possible. One of the local ones in my area requires either you be an employee of a select few companies, a member of a select few unions, or a resident of any county they have a branch in. That third option is why most of the poor of our region end up with them. They have no fees, and the only minimum is to keep a $5 "share" in the credit union. Check cashing places don't even bother to set up shop in town (for
you are blacklisted by ChexSystems (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I must be grandfathered....I haven't had a steady income in years, yet I'm a huge credit card user. In fact two weeks ago somebody from another state tried to use my credit card information at seniorpeoplemeet.com and so I had to close the account and wait for them to send me a new card (I'm guessing some merchant had their database compromised.) Being used to living cashless for all of these years sucks when your only means of payment is gone for a week.
I use the credit card for literally everything, yet I
Re: (Score:2)
age discrimination, by prohibiting legal adults from obtaining credit cards unless they meet income requirements that are impossible to obtain for most young people, especially students.
This lack of critical thinking skills is what created the problem where the CC companies were preying on students' presumed future incomes before they even had any income, and therefore, before they knew the value of their future income. Then they graduate, and they're actually already so far in CC debt, the first thing they do when they graduate and a get a job is to cancel all their credit cards because all they can afford is a maintenance payment on what they already owe.
Any you may not have considered t
Re: (Score:2)
There are a lot of people immigrants here without papers. No bank accounts for them.
Re: (Score:2)
There are a giant number of people here who are either not "employed" (i.e. being paid cash under the table) or are not US citizens or do not have bill-paying history (young).
The Western banking system completely cuts those people out. Yet almost all of them have cell phones. Thus, T-Mobile's push.
Re: (Score:2)
Completely impossible for someone without citizenship or immigration papers.
And there are many millions of people here in the US in that situation.
But they all have cell phones, and many of them even pay taxes.
Then you are privileged. (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, if you are so far above the line that this occurs at that no one you know falls below it, you are a hell of a lot better off than you think.
The problem with middle class is for some reason they seem to think that is what poor is, and cannot conceive of someone worse of than them.
I started off poor. I grew up moving from eviction to eviction. bank accounts were simply not an option for my mother, she had floated checks to try and stave off evictions. We went hungry often. A night with no food, or maybe a package of crackers to share, was common- at least once a week, and often more.
The road up from there is steep, and many do not make the climb. College was not an option- too poor to afford it, not poor or minority enough to get scholarships. Grants that were available would not cut it- and the aforementioned poverty and evictions meant no student loans for us. Constant moving meant a school history that does not bring the scholarships flocking. Sports? Who has time to excel at sports when finding supper is the priority? The military was my only hope, and even that was iffy - could I get a training that will translate to decent civilian jobs? (spoiler- I did.)
I am middle class now- upper middle to be honest-, but that was a very gradual climb taking over 20 years.
But I do recognize how far I have climbed and DO understand the people still struggling at the bottom are not there because they are lazy bums.
Re:Then you are privileged. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Except this isn't a symptom of being poor, rather it's a symptom of poorly managing your finances. It's really *really* easy to get a free checking account, but if you're a dumbass and regularly get NSF on checks you write, then you'll eventually get blacklisted and nobody will give you shit. This is incredibly easy to avoid doing, just most people who are poor typically have no idea how to manage money (which is part of the reason why they're poor -- I can't tell you how many people I know who have better
Re: (Score:2)
Agree completely. This is being helped along by the erosion of the true middle class. Now it is the "Poor" vs. "So poor they can't cannot even afford to eat."
Both categories suck to be in, and both are hard to climb out of. People that deny class warfare are simply ignorant of the situation, willfully or otherwise.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Check cashing is there for undocumented people (who can't provide the basic information to get an account, but are occasionally paid by check). I actually used to work for a bank (one of the larger US ones) that owned a Check Cashing business and they used to send someone out to the day laborer sites on paydays to facilitate the process.
It's about as predatory of a practice as you can get and even the company that owned these check cashing locations knew that it was scuzzy. I remember getting a vibe when
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Strange concept, people who are in a country illegally, having broken that country's laws, have difficulties doing business in that country.
My sympathy factor is about zero.
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Probably because you're the descendent of invaders pretending that the descendents of native inhabitants are the problem, and/or supported policies that have trashed the governments and economies of said natives.
Re: (Score:3)
BS cop out. Pretty much every country at some point in its history had invasion or colonization providing a portion of the modern inhabitants.
Of course, I'm also a descendant of the "invadees" so I have every right. However, when I did work in a foreign country, I had enough respect for them to apply for a work visa. When I brought foreign citizen family back, I also complied with the laws. I have an exemption from your BS and double grounds to complain about illegals.
Re: (Score:2)
AC said undocumented, not illegal immigrant.
Have you ever tried to bootstrap yourself into having documentation without starting with any documentation?
Re: (Score:3)
"Undocumented" is just a modern euphemism for "illegal." If you are here legally, then you have documentation because you applied for it and received it before entering the country. If you don't have it on you because you lost it, you can request new documentation from the government. There is no bootstrapping necessary.
If you are illegal, you are not supposed to be in the country. You have no grounds on which to complain that the country's laws and customs are not friendly to your illegal status.
Re:Why do these exist (Score:5, Insightful)
In the US, most banks have free checking accounts
Citation needed.
I haven't seen a free checking account in ages. Some of them can be free, if you meet certain qualifications, but I seriously doubt there's any truly free ones out there any more. At the very least, they usually have a minimum balance requirement; at my bank, it's $100 for their lowest-level checking account. If you drop below that at any point, they sock you with fees. Poor people can't handle an account like that because they won't be able to keep up the minimum balance; at some point, they'll need the money NOW and their balance will drop, and that $8 fee will really hurt them. That's why they're called "poor": they can't afford an $8 service fee every month because some multibillion dollar bank wants fees on top of the interest they get for holding peoples' money.
It wasn't always like this. Back in the 80s (a much better time than now, in most respects), bank accounts were usually free, had good interest rates, and there were no fees for almost anything. Even though ATMs were brand-new technology, they were really reliable (no BSODs then), AND you could use other banks' ATMs, without a fee!
Re: (Score:2)
Still like that in the UK, apart from the interest rates. In fact it's got better here since the 80s. But you do need solid ID to get a bank account for some reason.
Re: (Score:3)
Most community banks and credit unions have true free checking accounts.
http://www.nerdwallet.com/blog... [nerdwallet.com]
Commercial banks, not so much.
The problem is at least as much with bank location as it is the availability of free checking.
To paraphrase Willie Sutton, banks go where the money is.
Re: (Score:2)
I never had a "free" account, but I remember when we had good interest rates. My first CD, in the mid to late 80s, paid 8%, and IIRC, my regular savings was 2-3%. Even my checking gave me 1%. Nowdays, most long-term CDs aren't even 1%. :(
passbooks paid 4% interest for decades (Score:2)
The first CDs and money markets had high minimum balances, about $50K in 2010 inflated money. It took me years to save up enough for my first in the 1980s. Plus they had large early cash-in penalties- typically a half-year
Re: (Score:3)
Check out some credit unions. I think mine required a $5 buy-in/minimum deposit or something silly like that. The only fee I've ever paid (10+ years) was for my mortgage application. The catch is they don't have 3 branches in every single town throughout the US...which doesn't matter if you're poor and don't travel or rarely need a teller (like me).
The banking industry of the 80's was a mess. The prime rate hit the highest ever of 21.5% and averaged around 15% for the decade (currently 3.25% for referen
Re: (Score:2)
Unless things have changed, most credit unions have membership requirements, such as being an employee of some big company they're affiliated with.
I declined and walked out a few years back when I realized what they were asking of me and asking me to sign
Can you elaborate?
Re: (Score:2)
Checking accounts are not cheap for a bank to run. I know something about this because I am a member of a credit union, and, being a finance nerd, looked through their books. It is pretty likely that even at $8 per month in fees, a bank would actually be subsidizing a depositor if they didn't also have an account besides checking. The reason that banks were willing to offer large subsidies for checking, ATM use, etc. in the 80's was because it was easier to create lock-in. If you had a checking account
Re: (Score:2)
Could you elaborate on what makes it not cheap?
Re: (Score:2)
had good interest rates
This is because historic interest rates were insane at the time -- the highest they've ever been [yahoo.com]. When you bought a house, your mortgage rate was about the same as the one you have when you run a balance on a credit card today. Can you imagine buying a house with your credit card, and running that balance for decades? That's what it was like -- so be careful what you wish for when pining for the 80s, especially regarding interest rates.
Re: (Score:3)
Can you imagine buying a house with your credit card, and running that balance for decades? That's what it was like -- so be careful what you wish for when pining for the 80s, especially regarding interest rates.
I realize the interest rates were high back then, but house prices also weren't grossly inflated by speculation and a bubble back then the way they are now. Also, the credit card comparison isn't quite fair: yes, the interest rates were high, but mortgage interest has always been simple interest, n
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Just about everywhere. Because the same entities that crashed the economy in the first place by betting on housing, have taken their taxpayer-funded bailout money and used it to buy up foreclosed properties to flip or rent.
Re: (Score:2)
http://www.depositaccounts.com/blog/2007/12/introduction-high-yield-checking-deals.html [depositaccounts.com]
http://www.depositaccounts.com/us/checking/reward-checking-accounts.html [depositaccounts.com]
The best checking accounts are not only free, they actually pay you. Most of these accounts have no fees, no minimums (in fact they have a maximum). The banks/credit unions make money off of them when you use your debit card for purchases. The merchant pays part of the purchase
Re: (Score:2)
You've got to be kidding. Poor people don't have employers who do direct deposit, and when they're working 3 jobs, they sure as hell don't have time to do ACH transfers from other accounts, or to do all this research you talk of. You're just another typical right-wing Fox News-watching American who hates poor people.
Re: (Score:2)
My credit union does free checking, and my bank has a deal where there's no minimum balance, but if you have at least $1,000 in it they'll pay you interest (USAA).
Re: (Score:2)
USAA is for military service members only. Some random poor person can't get an account there. They don't even have physical locations; what good is that to some poor person who wants to cash his paycheck?
Does your credit union let anyone join, or do they have selective membership like most?
Re: (Score:2)
Not a bank. That's a credit union.
Usually, credit unions have some kind of membership rules: you have to be an employee of some big company, or the local government, or whatever entity the CU is affiliated with. Some random poor person can't just walk in off the street and join. The whole idea of a CU, historically, was to provide banking services to a select pool of people who are, on average, financially very stable, so the institution doesn't have to assume the same risk a regular deposit bank does wi
Re: (Score:2)
People who are charged with various money related crimes are banned from banking. A coworker I worked with was a drug dealer and was picked up on tax evasion and did 2 years in the can. He can't have a bank account. Another guy I knew through a friend was caught embezzling $35,000 from his place of work. He did not serve time but had to pay it all back using money borrowed from his parents. He also can't have a bank account for at least another 5 or 6 years (something like a 15 year ban).
I am sure there are
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Since it would seem that most /. folks are unaware, allow me to explain exactly why many folks don't have bank accounts -- it's simply that due to onerous fees, if/once someone makes a mistake, their existing bank piles on miles of crap fees until such time as the account, through little to no direct action of the customer, ends up irreparably into a negative balance; one of my own employees went negative by about $20, and within 3 months, through no further action by him, he was told his account was someth
Re: (Score:2)
Banks either won't let them or have made it near impossible for some. Those people have been abandoned by the banking industry.
If you have a negative balance at a bank like Bank of America they PILE on the fees. Instead of one bounce fee they go high to low to get the most number possible. Then they charge for each day negative. If you do not fix it soon you could owe hundreds or even thousands in fees. They then keep this on file and here is the problem... They share it with other banks and REQUIRE i
Welfare (Score:3)
The first thing that comes to mind is illegal immigrants. Some other people on this thread have mentioned criminal records. Then there's welfare. You start to lose benefits if you have too much money in the bank. It's a pathetic amount like $2000. There's no way you can dig yourself out of the welfare trap with $2000 if you lose your $500/mo EBT because of that. So. Cash the check, buy some bling. That's your real savings. The poor who do this are acting as perfectly rational economic actors. If y
Re: (Score:2)
In the US, most banks have free checking accounts. Why don't these people just use a bank?
Not anymore. Banks were doing that for a few years because of competition. Now most charge a fee or have a minimum balance (usually $1500)
Here is a situation I was in when I was younger: the company I worked for closed, and I lost my job. My checking account ended up -$120 at the end of the month. (because I made the mistake of freely using the "free" $400 overdraft protection; which they marketed to me as being credit) Then when I didn't pay them back within 30 days, they closed the account; but since it w
Re: (Score:2)
Or they are a single parent working two jobs, living paycheck to paycheck, trying to do what they can to better themselves, but in the meantime don't have the money or patience to deal with $34.50 overdraft fees after the bank auto-debited their $15 monthly service fee a day earlier than expected. Banks are horrible services to deal with if you actually NEED to use ALL of your money before the next payday.
A person in this scenario, if they are going to have a cellphone anyway, could save a lot of time, mon
Why do we need NFC for financial transactions? (Score:2)
If the retailer and the customer both have an Internet connection (independent of each other preferred for security), why is NFC necessary?
Hallelujah (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
That reminds me of an incident that happened in the Phoenix area a few years ago. Some guy was running for local office; his last name was "Robson" (I forget his first name now). Anyway, to help with the campaign, his son went out with other people to post campaign signs around town (in the PHX area, you'll usually see campaign posters on the corners at main boulevard intersections for a few months before an election). He was out one night posting signs, and got robbed. The first comment in the local pa
T-Mobile targeting future markets (Score:4, Insightful)
Look at the economy. Where is it compared to years prior? Where is it going? The poor are increasing in numbers for a wide variety of reasons. They are *the* growing market. To not find a way to serve them would be ridiculous.
Re: (Score:2)
The sad thing is most companies write paychecks on banks with existing local branches. Many cash checks drawn on their own accounts for free and even the most avaricious of them will comply for a few bucks ($4-$5 US, locally).
Re: (Score:2)
You are correct, but it only makes business sense if you can mitigate some of the inherent higher financial risk that comes with doing business with poor people. That's why it's a fee-based structure, and that's why the fees are so high -- they have to offset the statistically-higher percentage of poor people who (for whatever reason) don't / can't hold up their end of the bargain -- by trying to cash bad checks etc. Many people blame the banks for this simply because "the banks are evil," but in reality,
Lots of precedent (Score:2)
Lots of precedent for this, look at Bluebird from American Express, for example. Essentially the same services.
No surprise, again (Score:5, Interesting)
The European banking system (T-Mobile originates in Germany) is highly competitive. Checks basically don't exist anymore. You can still use them, but nobody wants to, because the alternatives are much more comfortable and reliable. I can only imagine that the people at T-Mobile are constantly thinking "WTF? Does nobody realize how unnecessarily complicated and expensive banking is in this country? Why isn't anybody doing something about it? Maybe we should do something about it."
Checks in the mail. Seriously, folks?
Re: (Score:2)
Why should the banks do anything to change? They have an oligopoly, and if they lose money for any reason, they get a no-strings bailout from the federal government.
The latest news in New York is that governor Cuomo is going to take a homeowners' foreclosure rescue fund and give it to the big banks.
Re: (Score:2)
Does the US not have smaller banks or credit unions anymore?
Is there some rule or law that forces people into using the services of the giant greedy corporate banks?
Or have the big banks bought all the little guys out?
Re: (Score:2)
Tyler Durden (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
"T-Mobile already offers a very affordable $50 plan with or without a credit check for their customers, which can genuinely help some low income customers."
Affordable? 50$ is *a lot* of money when you are poor.
Walmart tried it too. May be even google (Score:2)
1. They make it so easy to steal identities. A name and a matching social security number is all they ask, extend credit and are willing to eat their financial losses of identity theft. But the people whose identities are stolen have a long and arduous task of cleaning up their credit history. They make so difficult to freeze and lock my cre
Re: (Score:2)
1. They make it so easy to steal identities. A name and a matching social security number is all they ask, extend credit and are willing to eat their financial losses of identity theft. But the people whose identities are stolen have a long and arduous task of cleaning up their credit history. They make so difficult to freeze and lock my credit report to prevent identity theft by huge lobbying effort.
The solution to this should be conceptually simple: a "gang" needs to get together and steal the identities
Re: (Score:2)
1. They make it so easy to steal identities. A name and a matching social security number is all they ask, extend credit and are willing to eat their financial losses of identity theft. But the people whose identities are stolen have a long and arduous task of cleaning up their credit history. They make so difficult to freeze and lock my credit report to prevent identity theft by huge lobbying effort.
The solution to this should be conceptually simple: a "gang" needs to get together and steal the identities of various rich people, CEOs (especially those in banking), politicians, etc. Give away those identities (name and matching SSN is all that's needed, as you say) on the internet in places where lots of nefarious people will use them.
Do you still live in the 90's? Nowadays the FBI and local swat team will raid that "gang" as a matter of priority. We live in a plutocracy. Only money is represented. Remember the golden rule: he who has the gold makes the rules.
And then? (Score:2)
What happens when you decide a different company has better phone service but all your money is locked up in tmobile banking?
Africa leads the US (Score:2)
References
EcoCash Zimbabwe [econet.co.zw]
M-Pesa - Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]
so how is this different (Score:2)
Making Direct Deposit Easier (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
setting up direct deposit is a pain in the ass: fill out a paper form, search around for routing and account numbers. The payroll department ...
Couldn't all of this be taken care of with a single, one-time, QR code, generated on-demand by you (or, actually, by you bank's online or mobile access application) and given directly to HR, who then simply passes it on to the payroll processor?
If only!
When setting up new job direct deposit in 2008 and another in 2012 they BOTH insisted not only on a paper form, but on a voided paper check attached to it! Uh, I use a bill pay service, I don't write my own checks. I don't know if it was HR/payroll department requirement or the payroll processor (don't remember who it was for the 2008 company, but currently it is ADP, talk about stuck in the dark ages...).
I'm just glad that everything else will accept my routing and account numbers without the pap
Re: (Score:2)
Two solutions (Score:2)
1. Eliminate KYC/AML (not going to happen as the ruling elites don't want freedom fighters and other adversaries to utilize the banking system for their cause)
2. Or, just use bitcoins. (T-mobile is far capable of operating a wallet and exchange service)
cell-banks in Africa for a decade (Score:2)
Good idea, not the best venue? (Score:2)
I wish Safeway has thought of this. A grocery store would be a place people without bank accounts would already come on regular basis, and they already have a secure way of handling cash. Either physical or online crime against a company that has no experience handling it is not going to be pretty.
Re:so many middle men (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd be less cynical in this particular case: it looks like a genuinely innovative bit of middle-man work, which could serve its target audience better than the current solutions. (If it doesn't, it will of course fail.)
PayPal was an innovation at the time it was new, and served its users better than anything else out there. T-Mobile's new idea looks similar: it aims to serve customers in a way banks are for some reason reluctant or unable to do.
There is a place in the world for these 'middle-men' roles.
Re: (Score:2)
Of course we still have cheques. Unlike the GP, we seem to have to write them for quite a lot of after-school clubs and things. It does seem very last century to me.
Re: (Score:2)
In the U.S. we still have a little bit of freedom.
This is one of the most bizarre claims of "freedom" I think I've ever heard.
Of course we're still "free" to use cheques, and often companies still do for various things. But, the cheque guarantee system was shuttered.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Cool idea (Score:2)
I would gladly pay $60 to at&t for a better coverage than my $40 T-Mobile plan. But their bill comes to $90 by the time you add texting and then I would still go over the data limit and get charged god knows what. So it got to the point where I compromise by having a phone that usually works rather than breaking the bank for 100% coverage.
Re: (Score:2)
That's fine, Verizon indisputably has the best coverage for the wide swaths of exurban / rural America. T-mobile only really has solid coverage in urban / suburban areas and highway corridors. For me and many people, that's fine... I'll spend the rest of the money I save on home internet and wifi.