Australia wants to reclassify & strictly regulate Apple Pay
Digital wallets currently fall outside Australia's traditional financial regulatory systems, so regulators propose labeling Apple and other tech giants as payment systems to better govern their wallets.

Apple Pay targeted by Australian regulators
Apple Pay, Google Pay, and other digital wallets allow users to add banking cards to their devices and pay for goods and services. This payment method has become more prevalent in recent years, and the Australian government fears losing a grip on such systems without proper regulation.
According to Reuters, the Australian government wants to designate tech companies as payment systems to bring them into the regulatory environment. As of now, companies like Apple, Google, and WeChat exist outside of the financial regulatory system.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said he would "carefully consider" tighter regulations on digital payment services. "Ultimately, if we do nothing to reform the current framework, it will be Silicon Valley alone that determines the future of our payments system, a critical piece of our economic infrastructure," he concluded.
It has also been recommended that the government and tech industry establish a strategic plan for a single, integrated licensing framework for payment systems. Apple, Google, and others each use proprietary systems developed in-house for payments.
Apple was also the target of Australian regulators in July 2021 due to the closed nature of iPhone's NFC payment system. Regulators questioned Apple as to why it only allowed Apple Pay to use its tap-to-pay feature, and it said security.
As regulators worldwide struggle to deal with the emergence of digital wallets, they continue to see rapid adoption. According to The Reserve Bank of Australia, payments from digital wallets grew to 8% of in-person transactions from 2% in 2016.
Read on AppleInsider

Apple Pay targeted by Australian regulators
Apple Pay, Google Pay, and other digital wallets allow users to add banking cards to their devices and pay for goods and services. This payment method has become more prevalent in recent years, and the Australian government fears losing a grip on such systems without proper regulation.
According to Reuters, the Australian government wants to designate tech companies as payment systems to bring them into the regulatory environment. As of now, companies like Apple, Google, and WeChat exist outside of the financial regulatory system.
Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said he would "carefully consider" tighter regulations on digital payment services. "Ultimately, if we do nothing to reform the current framework, it will be Silicon Valley alone that determines the future of our payments system, a critical piece of our economic infrastructure," he concluded.
It has also been recommended that the government and tech industry establish a strategic plan for a single, integrated licensing framework for payment systems. Apple, Google, and others each use proprietary systems developed in-house for payments.
Apple was also the target of Australian regulators in July 2021 due to the closed nature of iPhone's NFC payment system. Regulators questioned Apple as to why it only allowed Apple Pay to use its tap-to-pay feature, and it said security.
As regulators worldwide struggle to deal with the emergence of digital wallets, they continue to see rapid adoption. According to The Reserve Bank of Australia, payments from digital wallets grew to 8% of in-person transactions from 2% in 2016.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Agreed. good regulation can foster competition and growth, ultimately improving the system for consumers. Bad regulation can do the opposite. (of course, if you have a monopoly and regulation limits your power then you view it quite differently!)
Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, Google Pay and even PayPal are systems to replace Physical Cards. They allow you to process a payment both physically and digitally using your banking credentials.
Apple though is the only one that takes the processing of a payment a step further by tokenizing the user’s banking info. This helps to privatize the user’s info, so in the event of a system breach, like what happened to Home Depot and Target a few years ago, the user’s info would not have been exposed.
https://support.google.com/pay/merchants/answer/6345242?hl=en
https://www.advantio.com/blog/heres-how-google-pay-apple-pay-samsung-pay-protect-your-card-details
https://www.paypal.com/au/webapps/mpp/about
Australian politics has been crazy for a lot more than the last five years.