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The Great Paywall: The Coming Shift to Microtransactions on the Web

1 pointsby dollaralmost 2 years ago

1 comment

hilbert42almost 2 years ago
There is merit in some of these ideas, especially if user interaction is simple or essentially seamless.<p>I, like many others, am quite paranoid about giving out my credit card details along with my address and other personal information for both security and privacy reasons, so I would not use any scheme that requires me having to provide this information. That would likely exclude me from schemes where, say, advertisers want actual personal info.<p>A scheme I&#x27;d be very happy with would be one where the user buys an anonymous card with a unique ID and a given amount of credit at say one&#x27;s local supermarket or newsagent and uses the value on the card to make micro-payments.<p>I&#x27;m envisioning something like a scratchy lottery ticket where one scratches off a security layer to reveal a code that would be used to make payments.<p>All that&#x27;s required of the user would be to enter the number into one&#x27;s browser and that&#x27;s all. The browser&#x27;s card management system would keep tally on payments and the credit balance and give the user control over whether to make a payment or not.<p>Such a scheme would ensure privacy and if the card&#x27;s security was compromised then very little money would be lost—and that loss immediately noticeable.<p>Such a scheme would be very useful in making donations to developers of free&#x2F;open software (at present, privacy and security concerns and having to enter one&#x27;s credit card details every time (or for every site) puts a high up-front barrier and it&#x27;s all too easy for the user to dismiss the developer&#x27;s plea for a donation).