Other than a recent problem with Discover and a grocery store, I'd have to go back pretty far to remember a time when I had an issue with it. I'm currently using it maybe 15% of the time, which is also unfortunate.
Most retailers are enabling chip without enabling NFC. I think the people expecting a sudden increase in the number of Apple Pay accepting locations in a couple of weeks will be disappointed.
Security might matter to a few, but most people don't really care. Not when the fraudulent charge's reversed and a new card's on the way the instant you call your card issuer. I'd even go as far as to say that people don't really care that much about privacy either--otherwise people wouldn't shop at places like Target that mine customer data without their consent.
It's also keeping a technology alive that should have died a decade ago (like in Europe and elsewhere), basically giving retailers an excuse to half-ass their upgrades. This might be harsh but I'd rather there be no mobile payments at all in the US than us keeping a crutch around.
I think you'll be seeing a lot more of it soon. Next month is the deadline for merchants to upgrade their equipment to accommodate chip cards. Most of those machines will be NFC capable as well.
Most retailers are enabling chip without enabling NFC. I think the people expecting a sudden increase in the number of Apple Pay accepting locations in a couple of weeks will be disappointed.
I feel that most of us have forgotten the security benefit and merely looking at it from a convenience perspective. Also, I'm not sure how many year it took for the credit card industry to be wide spread enough for daily use, but I'm sure it took more than 2 years.
Security might matter to a few, but most people don't really care. Not when the fraudulent charge's reversed and a new card's on the way the instant you call your card issuer. I'd even go as far as to say that people don't really care that much about privacy either--otherwise people wouldn't shop at places like Target that mine customer data without their consent.
Security is great but if you can't utilize the functionality you receive no benefit. As only about 20% of the places I shop accept AP, it does me little benefit to utilize it. Samsung Pay on the other hand looks to have a much broader venue.
It's also keeping a technology alive that should have died a decade ago (like in Europe and elsewhere), basically giving retailers an excuse to half-ass their upgrades. This might be harsh but I'd rather there be no mobile payments at all in the US than us keeping a crutch around.