From: “Joseph M. Reagle Jr.” <reagle@mit.edu>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: a313dd9c63064ad4cb0b97699b92aa3a700b4e604b30ee22d3c1707aaf0aef84
Message ID: <9606052238.AA27259@rpcp.mit.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-06-06 09:35:18 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 17:35:18 +0800
From: "Joseph M. Reagle Jr." <reagle@mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 6 Jun 1996 17:35:18 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: National Bank Brings Internet CyberCash To Canada 06/05/96
Message-ID: <9606052238.AA27259@rpcp.mit.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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>Date: Wed, 5 Jun 1996 17:18:39 -0400
>From: reagle@rpcp.mit.edu (Joseph M. Reagle Jr.)
>To: reagle@rpcp.mit.edu
>Subject: National Bank Brings Internet CyberCash To Canada 06/05/96
>
>
>
>MONTREAL, QUEBEC, CANADA, 1996 JUN 5 (NB) -- The National Bank of
>Canada, one of Canada's smaller chartered banks, has signed an
>agreement with CyberCash Inc. (NASDAQ:CYCH) to bring the Reston,
>Virginia-based company's Internet payment service to Canada.
>
>CyberCash touts its payment service -- also called CyberCash -- as a
>secure method of making payments over the Internet using a credit
>card.
>
>To use the system, a consumer first downloads software called the
>CyberCash wallet from CyberCash's site on the World Wide Web
>(http://www.cybercash.com ) or from a participating merchant's
>site, said Melissa Walia, a spokeswoman for CyberCash. The free
>software, installed on the user's PC, allows the customer to make
>purchases via the Internet and have them charged to a credit card.
>
>CyberCash supports major credit cards such as Visa, MasterCard,
>American Express, and Discover, company officials said. Walia told
>Newsbytes that Canadians who wish to use the service will not have
>to be customers of the National Bank. The bank will work with
>participating Canadian merchants to provide the CyberCash service.
>
>The CyberCash Cash Register is the merchant piece of the
>CyberCash system. It works on a merchant's server and receives
>information necessary to process a credit card transaction. The
>system is designed to work with an existing financial institution
>infrastructure, officials said.
>
>CyberCash said it is committed to supporting the Secure Electronic
>Transaction (SET) standard for Internet credit-card transactions,
>announced recently by Visa and MasterCard. The company claimed it
>plans to be one of the first SET-compliant Internet payment services
>available.
>
>Neither Walia nor Bridget Limoges, a spokeswoman for the National
>Bank, would say how many Canadian merchants have signed up to
>use CyberCash at this point. However, Limoges told Newsbytes that
>interest in the technology has been strong.
>
>The CyberCash credit-card payment service, launched in the United
>States in April, 1995, is expected to be available to Canadians
>this summer, Limoges said. CyberCash also said it is working on
>electronic check and coin services, expected to be released in
>the second half of this year.
>
>(Grant Buckler/19960605/Press Contact: Melissa Walia, Niehaus
>Ryan Group for CyberCash, tel 415-615-7911, fax 415-615-7901,
>Internet e-mail melissa@nrgpr.com; Bridget Limoges, National Bank
>of Canada, 514-394-6494; Public Contact: CyberCash, Internet
>e-mail info@cybercash.com)
>
>
>
_______________________
Regards, Real generosity toward the future lies in giving
all to the present. - Albert Camus
Joseph Reagle http://farnsworth.mit.edu/~reagle/home.html
reagle@mit.edu E0 D5 B2 05 B6 12 DA 65 BE 4D E3 C1 6A 66 25 4E
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1996-06-06 (Thu, 6 Jun 1996 17:35:18 +0800) - National Bank Brings Internet CyberCash To Canada 06/05/96 - “Joseph M. Reagle Jr.” <reagle@mit.edu>