CNET How To - Tuesday, August 29, 2017 at 4:00 AM
Here's how peer-to-peer Apple Pay payments will work - CNET
Apple Pay can be used to pay online or at stores, but it'll soon get
peer-to-peer payments, too. That means payments to friends or anyone else
you have on your contacts list. The feature was announced in June at Apple's
developer conference, where it was marketed as one of the big upgrades in
iOS 11. That update to iPhones and iPads is likely to hit some time in
September, if Apple follows its traditional release schedule.  
While plenty of other mobile payment apps exist to transfer money to friends
-- such as PayPal and Venmo -- Apple Pay's tight integration with the rest
of the company's software ecosystem could make it the most seamless solution
for Apple users. It doesn't require additional accounts to be set up. But
Android users can't send or receive payments: Both sides of the transaction
need to be on iMessage. 
We've seen a brief demo of the service in action. Here's everything we know
about peer-to-peer payments so far. 
It'll be US-only at first.
Much like Apple Pay was when it first launched, peer-to-peer payments will
be a US feature at first. 
You can pay someone via iMessage or Siri, on iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch or
Mac.
You do need to make sure the other person has an active iMessage account,
though. 
When a payment is received, it's immediately converted to an Apple Pay Cash
Card.
The virtual card lives in Wallet on iOS 11, and can be used like a gift card
to make payments. The advantage is that it's essentially a virtual instant
bank account for cash, and payments are received instantaneously. This is
how other payment systems like Venmo and PayPal work, too. 
You get money in the Cash Card even if you're not enrolled in Apple Pay.
Surprise! If you get a payment you don't need to do anything to set it up.
Once money is transferred, an Apple Pay Cash Card gets automatically
generated on your phone. 
It works with tap-to-pay.
The money can be used at any Apple Pay-enabled location. 
It works without signing into another service.
As long as the other person's using iMessage, a payment can be made. 
>From there, money can be transferred to a bank... but it always goes to the
Cash Card first.
Apple won't let you put money directly in your bank account. It always goes
to that Cash Card first, similar to how Square, PayPal, Venmo and other
payment services work. 
The Cash Card lives in an off-phone account and works across authorized
devices.
In case the phone gets lost or stolen, Apple says the card will keep its
money in an encrypted account off the phone itself. The money can be used
across devices, meaning you should be able to get the cash on an iPhone and
use it on your Mac or iPad, too... or even an Apple Watch. 

Original Article at:
https://www.cnet.com/how-to/heres-how-peer-to-peer-apple-pay-payments-will-w
ork/#ftag=CAD5457c2c


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