Skip to main content

Tim Cook says money will be forgotten by history, thanks to Apple Pay

apple ceo tim cook fbi vs version 1458240114 is right about privacy and encryption  we shouldn t give them up for google
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Tim Cook raised some eyebrows recently while on a U.K. tour in support of Apple Pay, when he said bluntly, “your kids will not know what money is.”

Apple Pay, Google Pay, and the recently arrived Samsung Pay are heavily invested in transforming digital payments as we know it. Cashless transactions represent a significant portion of the transaction market already. There’s also the rise in digital currencies, such as bitcoin to consider. Whether cash will ever really be forgotten in time comes down to whether people will want to let go of something so familiar.

Recommended Videos

As convenient as these technologies prove to be, there are a number of reasons why money may not be going away anytime soon. It may prove difficult to replace the tangibility of cash. Cash is convenient. Cash can be held. Cash is king. Compared to a number on a screen, cash is familiar.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

It can also be argued that there are  some transactions that many people may not want to be tracked for convenience or any reason at all. Consider items such as gifts, private loans to friends, poker night proceeds, tips for your waiter, tips at a gentlemen’s club, and so on as things that people may not want a digital record of. Many people could also have trust issues with technology itself, given the spate of cyber breaches that has reached the public consciousness. There are also a number of concerns about privacy, government control, regulations, and so forth to consider.

Cook did lay out answers surrounding some of the security concerns including advocating the encryption of systems completely without any backdoor access. “We will productively work with the governments to try to convince them that’s also in their best interests in the national security sense,” he said.

Cook’s statement challenges convention and that is one thing we have come to expect from a company that wants to change the way we interact with our world.

John Casaretto
Former Digital Trends Contributor
John is the founder of the security company BlackCert, a provider of SSL digital certificates and encryption products. A…
No, you can’t use an Apple gift card on Apple Pay
Photo of Apple gift cards.

A viral TikTok has made the internet rounds, showing a person who thought that they could transfer Apple gift card funds to Apple Pay. After buying a $300 Apple gift card, however, they quickly learned that that's simply not possible. While their choice might seem misguided in hindsight, there are plenty of people who have been left confused about the differences between Apple gift cards and Apple Pay.

While having a $300 Apple gift card certainly has its uses — such as buying 10 years of Apple Music, as the original poster jokingly pointed out — it's certainly not the same as having that same money to spend freely with Apple Pay. To avoid making the same mistake as this TikTok user, make sure that you understand the distinctions between the two Apple services, as it might just save you $300 (or more).
You cannot add Apple gift cards to Apple Pay

Read more
A long-awaited Apple Pay feature is finally on your iPhone
Apple Pay Later

Apple announced Apple Pay Later last year when it revealed iOS 16 at WWDC 2022. The feature is finally rolling out to “randomly selected users” as of today, through a prerelease version of Apple Pay Later in the Wallet app. Those who have access to this prerelease version should have received an email to their Apple ID account, and they will need iOS 16.4 and iPadOS 16.4.

This is a prerelease version of Apple Pay Later, and the full service will be rolling out to eligible iPhone users older than 18 in the U.S. in the “coming months.”

Read more
In 2023, it’s time to finally ditch your real wallet for Apple Pay
Front of Apple Card

In the early 2000s, the U.S. started accepting contactless payments at credit card terminals, which used near-field communication (NFC) technology to make it happen. However, it was still too early and not widely adopted until 2008, when the major credit card companies began to offer contactless credit cards.

But contactless payments continued to evolve. Soon enough, Apple added Apple Pay in 2014, allowing you to add your credit and debit cards in the digital Wallet app and pay with your phone. There is also Google Pay for Android devices, and even Samsung has its own version of mobile payments called Samsung Pay.

Read more