Mastercard, Visa invest in fintech Plaid
The two credit card companies are hoping to make payment systems more secure by investing in the blockchain unicorn.
The two credit card companies are hoping to make payment systems more secure by investing in the blockchain unicorn.
The Latvian cryptocurrency exchange hopes to gain a new level of banking respect by being associated with MasterCard.
Mastercard is helping fashion designers by tracking their supply chain and weeding out fakes.
Mastercard has posted several job openings in an attempt to compete with Bitcoin and Facebook.
The Singapore-based crypto service will offer the card from September, allowing users to pay for everyday transactions from crypto balances.
After noting that women in the crypto space are like unicorns, Mastercard has made a big investment in promoting women in the space.
Visa and Mastercard, the two biggest U.S. card networks, are planning to introduce higher fees, according to a report by Wall Street Journal. The new fees are expected to be implemented this coming April.
Cryptocurrency exchange Binance has announced it is now supporting debit and credit card payments, in a move expected to help increase mainstream adoption.
Mastercard has been handed a fine of over €570 million ($648.4 million) after it was found to be obstructing merchants from accessing lower fees for cross-border payments, contrary to European Union (EU) law.
Prolific patent filer Mastercard has applied for protection of yet another blockchain innovation—a platform that would allow anonymous blockchain transactions, using a somewhat familiar method.
Financial services giant Mastercard has snapped up yet another patent, this time for fractional cryptocurrency banking.
Payments giant Mastercard is reported to be exploring a number of new technologies, including blockchain, as the group looks to improve the general efficiency of its payments networks.