The digital euro could arrive by 2029 — but a bitter battle between Brussels and the banks stands in the way.

  • atro_city@fedia.io
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    3 days ago

    The digital euro won’t require the use a smartphone! That means no more Google and no more Malus necessary to spy on our transfers. if Wero can do the same, fine, but they refuse to decouple from the US, so fuck them (until they decouple).

    His conduct in parliamentary negotiations, his public speeches and his appearances at industry events all suggest a preference for private-sector solutions over the digital euro.

    Navarrete has an extensive background in the banking sector. He held several high-level positions at the Bank of Spain and served as the director of finance at the Spanish Official Credit Institute.

    Ah fuck… why do we let these people into positions where they can kill off competition? Fuck this dude. And of course he’s a right-winger. Would you look at that! Another corrupt anti-European from the right-wing ranks.

  • NanoooK@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    Make Wero good, and the standard. I want to be able to buy from a website using Wero, not Visa/Mastercard/Paypal.

  • nao@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    Of course banks and crypto bros complain, they only care about their own business model. This is exactly why we need the digital euro.

  • Etnaphele@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    “It’s as if cash did not exist, and the industry argued it was unfair because merchants have to accept it, and users don’t pay a fee,” Peter Norwood, a researcher at Finance Watch, a European non-profit that aims to reform finance in the public interest, told Euronews.

    “Cash is a public good. That is what the digital euro is meant to preserve in the digital age.”

    The only obstacle to this very great thing are the lobbying bastards who just want to continue hoarding cheap money. And it appears there one Spanish ex-banker - Navarrete - in the EPP sweating since years to slow it down. I wish him all the worse.

    Why do Europeans vote more and more self interested pricks who work actively against European welfare? The idiocy.

    • huppakee@piefed.social
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      4 days ago

      And it appears there one Spanish ex-banker - Navarrete - in the EPP sweating since years to slow it down.

      He must be loaded by now.

  • Steve@communick.news
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    4 days ago

    Why create a new kind of “digital euro” instead of a public credit card network? Why create entirely new tech?

    • dubak@feddit.org
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      4 days ago

      ECB specifies the legal framework for digital euro which is tech-agnostic. The current plan is that it would be possible to use plastic card, web browser with username+password, smart watch, retail terminal or any future technology with digital euro.

      • Steve@communick.news
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        4 days ago

        I guess the username+password part is new, but I’m not sure it’s enough of a reason to invent a whole new payment system. Normal CC networks do all the rest already.

        • dubak@feddit.org
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          4 days ago

          I’m not sure it’s enough of a reason to invent a whole new payment system.

          The Euronews report lists the reasons:

          Visa and Mastercard, both American, account for 61% of card payments in the eurozone and nearly all cross-border transactions, according to ECB data.

          US President Donald Trump’s return to the White House and his hostile approach to both foreign policy and trade accelerated the debate, and at the European Council in mid-March, EU leaders set a deadline to approve the legislation before the end of 2026.

          The ECB’s push to launch one is partly a response to the rise of privately issued stablecoins, which have steadily eaten into the payments landscape.

          The message from Brussels and institutions across the continent is clear: Europe wants to control its own money.

          • Steve@communick.news
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            4 days ago

            I did read all that. I’m all for creating a public way around the corporate payment networks.

            What I mean is, one could just create a public charge card network that works the same way, with the same infrastructure that Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, Diner’s Club, etc all use. All that would change are the fee structures everyone pays. I don’t see the need to reinvent the wheel here.

            • dubak@feddit.org
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              4 days ago

              What I mean is, one could just create a public charge card network that works the same way, with the same infrastructure that Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, Diner’s Club, etc all use.

              Visa and co. mostly don’t work on modern mobile phones. Digital euro strives to replace apple pay and google pay as well. Visa and co. also have lot of redundant functions like payment by credit, solvency assessment, cash back rewards, travel points and purchase protections. Digital euro doesn’t have that and as a consequence, it doesn’t need to intrude into customer’s privacy as much as credit card companies do. Nor does it incur the vast costs associated with credit recuperation on banks.

              • Steve@communick.news
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                4 days ago

                Visa and co. mostly don’t work on modern mobile phones.

                Never had a problem. Not sure what that means

                The networks don’t do credit, or cash back rewards, points and the like. That’s not Visa and friends. Those are offered by the banks who back the accounts. Debit cards don’t have those options and work exactly the same as far as the charge network is concerned.

                The public network doesn’t have to worry about any of that. People could use it with credit, debit, or charge cards whatever they wanted.

                • dubak@feddit.org
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                  2 days ago
                  Visa and co. mostly don’t work on modern mobile phones.
                  

                  Never had a problem. Not sure what that means

                  It means that you can’t transmit card details to a terminal through NFC. In general, Apple, Google, Xiaomi and co. push their own payment solutions (Apple pay, Xiaomi pay) and block use of NFC by other parties.

                  The networks don’t do credit, or cash back rewards, points and the like. That’s not Visa and friends. Those are offered by the banks who back the accounts.

                  I was using a short-hand language with the assumption that You understand that we are not talking about technological implementation. So to unpack my statements for You: Visa and co. mandate that banks and other financial providers implement credit, cash back or customer protection. ECB in their proposal of D€ does not mandate such functionality. In fact, the current proposal prevents implementation of such features. In sum, D€ is a different financial scheme than credit card schemes by Visa and co. and D€ is the less costly (not mandatory implementation of credit, cash back etc.) and more privacy-oriented scheme of the two.

                  Debit cards don’t have those options and work exactly the same as far as the charge network is concerned.

                  You listed AmEx previously and AmEx doesn’t do debit cards. So I assumed You want to talk about credit card networks. Visa and Mastercard’s “debit” cards are deferred-debit cards. Specification of D€ is more akin to prepaid cards. So again, there are differences and I’m not sure what kind of “public network” You are arguing for.

                  In general, Visa and co. provide in parallel a large set of (often competing) financial transaction tools. Mostly, they haven’t invented anything, they just try to stay relevant in the rapidly evolving environment of financial-transaction providers. Especially, in case of digital wallets they are lagging behind. ECB can’t afford that.

    • huppakee@piefed.social
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      4 days ago

      Credit card network is not a thing without traditional banks taking part, these kind of for-profit entities generally don’t play well with public good/open source things. Right now it looks both are being worked on (a for profit thing called Wero and a public good thing called the digital euro) and i suppose that it isn’t a bad thing we get both instead of either.

      • Steve@communick.news
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        4 days ago

        Nobody likes the charge card networks. They charge fees to nearly everyone. Banks would jump on a fee free alternative.