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New, safer ways to pay online
By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com
In
the past few weeks, thieves have stolen millions of credit-card
numbers from Egghead.com and creditcard.com. No one would blame
you if you're worried.
Even if your card number hasn't been stolen,
you might be paranoid this holiday season if you watch TV ads. Take
those American Express spots in which sleek yuppies (with digitally
obscured faces) fret about losing their privacy as they Web-shop
for the perfect basket of fruit for Aunt Maude.
The solution? Disposable card numbers called
Private
Payments!
Then there are the ads with the aforementioned
hackers in the basement who disappear in a blinding flash when a
smug shopper brandishes a "cyberized" Capital
One card. Kind of like scaring a vampire away with a cross.
How frightened should you feel about online
shopping? How useful are Amex's Private Payments? What the heck
is a cyberized card? In order, the answers are:
Online shopping is pretty safe, but
you have to watch out for delays that get your package delivered
after Christmas.
Amex's Private Payments are more of a marketing gimmick
than a bulwark against theft, but they're useful for buying online
porn.
A cyberized Capital One card lets you view your account
information online and makes you eligible for discounts at some
online retailers.
Despite hysteria whipped up by credit-card
companies, a lot more people are expected to shop online this holiday
season than last season. Jupiter Communications predicts that Americans
will buy $9 billion in goods online in November and December, and
Forrester Research predicts that total online sales, including travel,
will reach $10 billion between Thanksgiving and New Year's. That's
roughly a 60 percent increase over last year.
This year's holiday shoppers will find that,
in the last year, businesses have invented new ways to pay, retailers
are doing their best to have inventory on hand so it can be mailed
in time, and some online stores are slicker.
New ways to pay
Internet-based payment services such as PayPal
and Citibank's new c2it
have become popular in the last year. PayPal claims more than 4
million users, many of whom use it to pay for things they buy in
online auctions. These services are faster and usually cheaper than
mailing a check and waiting for it to clear.
Net-based payment services let you e-mail money
to someone else. Your payment can be charged to a credit card or
withdrawn from a bank account. You can use them to buy an auction
item or to send money to your favorite nephew in college -- the
one who does everything over the Internet.
Then there are those disposable card numbers
from American Express. With Private Payments, American Express cardholders
can generate temporary card numbers which can be used once and which
expire in 30 to 67 days. Each temporary number is matched with the
customer who generated it.
Private Payments numbers can be used only for
online transactions. Because each number can be used only once,
it is useless to any hacker who breaks into a retailer's Web site
and steals card numbers. The service is free.
Although online credit-card theft is relatively
uncommon, some shoppers might feel safer using Personal Payments.
Pornography connoisseurs are likely to use the service because some
online porn operators have been known to sell their customers' card
numbers or to repeatedly add charges to customers' cards. Disposable
card numbers that can be used only once will deter these unscrupulous
businesses.
For parents who want to keep watch over their
teens' spending while teaching them the joys of plopping down plastic,
Visa and American Express have introduced stored-value cards for
the PG-13 set. Visa's Buxx
card and American Express's Cobaltcard
look like credit cards and are targeted at teenagers.
These aren't credit cards; instead, they are
prepaid cards, like phone cards. They can be used just like credit
cards for many retail purchases, online or in stores, and parents
can add value to the cards by transferring money online from a checking
account to the stored-value account.
With these cards, teens get to act all grown-up
and stuff by paying with plastic, while having to live within spending
limits. Parents get to set the budget and they can review purchase
information online.
Better online shopping
Last year, many shoppers found out the hard way that online retailers
don't always deliver as promised. Some online stores were overwhelmed
by more business than they could handle, and they didn't do a good
job of telling buyers when they would receive their merchandise.
Some buyers didn't get their purchases until well after Christmas,
which sort of defeats the purpose of holiday shopping.
This year, according to Jupiter Communications,
online retailers are spending less on advertising and spending more
on making sure they have enough inventory and can ship it on time.
They also are trying to beef up return policies;
BestBuy.com
advertises that items bought online can be returned to any Best
Buy store. Amazon.com
will accept returns of gifts within 30 days after they are received
and give the recipient a gift certificate.
Finally, the Web allows consumers to reward
good online retailers and punish bad ones. A few sites do an especially
good job of ranking online stores and letting you know about their
strengths and weaknesses: Do they offer competitive prices? How
is customer service? Do they ship on time?
Bankrate's "Online
Commerce Exposed" series takes a look at dozens of online
retailers and a few "shopbots," software agents that bargain-hunt
for you.
And take a look at a Bankrate retrospective
of last year's holiday retail season, "e-Shopping
Lessons of Christmas Past," with sidebars on avoiding
snafus and returning
online purchases.
Forrester's
Power Rankings rates everything from online booksellers to brokerages,
judging them on factors including cost, customer service, delivery
and ease of use.
And Gomez.com
performs a similar service, with a clunkier interface.
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