
Customers not "squeamish" about giving supermarkets the finger...
By Jo Best
Published: 8 March 2006 15:35 GMT
Three Oxford branches of the Co-op will be asking their customers to give them their fingers this week, with the announcement the supermarket will now be accepting biometric payment.
Shoppers will be able to link their fingerprint with credit card or debit card information and verify payment by pressing their digit against a reader.
Users can sign up to the Pay By Touch system via the internet or in store, and the service is free. Bill Laird, COO of retail, Midcounties Co-op, said the launch had already generated a lot of interest, with customers keen to sign up to the biometric payment system.
The Co-op is trialling the system in response to customers' anxieties over having to remember various PIN numbers after the deadline for compulsory chip and PIN usage passed in February.
The first Oxford store to trial the biometrics system has reported that paying by fingerprint has initially proved faster than entering a PIN.
Laird told silicon.com the Co-op chose fingerprint reading over other biometrics as it is "the least squeamish and the most acceptable... other technologies are still at the proving stage", he said. Laird added that a small number of customers had expressed concerns about whether their fingerprints would be made available to outside agencies.
The pilot will last 16 weeks and customers will be asked for their feedback during the trial period. If customers are positive about the biometric payment, the Co-op will look into making the technology a permanent fixture in the stores.
A larger rollout is not yet planned. Laird said the stores will share the results of research and findings with other Co-ops. "It's up to them if they decide to use it," he said.
A number of stores in the US already have Pay by Touch technology installed, with around two million users paying using their biometric every week.
One supermarket said the technology had made it into the stores because of customer demand - and one man had even driven 400 miles to use the biometric payment system.
Pin projects in the past and have expertise in embedded software development in this area please get in touch ASAP for a full brief & Interview. My ...
Embedded C/C++ Development experience are the core skills that are required along with proven experience in developing EFT POS Chip & Pin Payment ...
This means challenging all exceptions to their policy to ensure business justification and complianceWe require several Enterprise and Solution ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Clive Longbottom Windows 7: Not perfect - but ready for prime time Microsoft's latest OS fixes most of Vista's ills - but still has challenges ahead
Stephen Kleynhans Mind the details with Windows 7 Just because it might work better than Vista, it doesn't mean you can be sloppy