micropaymentA micropayment is an e-commerce transaction involving a very small sum of money in exchange for something made available online, such as an application download, a service or Web-based content. Micropayments are sometimes defined as anything less than 75 cents and can be as low as a fraction of a cent. A special type of system is required for such payments, which are too small to be feasible for processing through credit card companies. Here's one scheme for micropayment: The user and seller each establish an account with a third-party service provider who monitors, collects and distributes micropayments. The seller encodes per-fee links inside a Web page. When the user initiates a transaction, payment goes through an Internet wallet account managed by the service provider. Micropayments accumulate until they are collected as single, larger payments. Such a system is helpful when a user wants to make one-time micropayments to multiple sellers. Seller-based accounts are more common for repeat business with an individual enterprise. Once a common micropayment standard has been established, some experts predict that streaming media sites, music and application downloads, content vendors, sports access sites and other specialized resources will make pay-per-use common online. Learn More About IT: > Wikipedia has an entry about micropayments. > Steve Smith discusses micropayments in his post, 'Pay to Play 3.0: Same Old Tune?' > On TechDirt, Mike Masnick explains the many reasons he doubts that micropayments will work.
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| Last updated on:
Jun 03, 2009 |
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