Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Computing
  5. Mobile
  6. Web
  7. News

Apple cranks up heat on PayPal by finally bringing Apple Pay to websites

Add as a preferred source on Google
Promotional logo for WWDC 2023.
This story is part of our complete Apple WWDC coverage

Look out PayPal, Apple’s coming for you! Apple announced Monday that it’s finally bringing Apple Pay to the web, essentially allowing users to pay for items through Apple Pay in Safari. Not only that, but Apple Pay will also be coming to the Mac through Sierra.

WWDC 2016: Look out, Facebook! Apple’s iMessage is now a platform

Recommended Videos

The move — first revealed last week in an exclusive report from Digital Trends — is likely to prove problematic for PayPal, which has long been the champion of web-based payments. Apple’s announcement was made at the 2016 Worldwide Developers Conference.

To date, Apple Pay has worked in a few different ways — users could load their phone with credit information and “tap to pay” at pay stations in-store, or use Apple Pay within apps to buy items or services at home. The only thing missing? Apple Pay on the web, which is what Monday’s announcement addressed.

Apple Pay Websites
Image used with permission by copyright holder

On the desktop, users will add items to their cart, and once they’re ready to check out, a message will pop up on the iPhone, which will allow the user to authenticate their purchase through TouchID. This is likely how Apple Pay will work until the Mac has more secure authentication methods. Of course, Apple Pay will only be available on Safari — Chrome users on a Mac won’t have access to the feature.

Apple Pay isn’t just expanding in use — it’s also expanding in users. The system is currently available in the U.S., Canada, U.K., Australia, and Singapore, but it’s also coming to France, Switzerland, and Hong Kong.

Of course, the move won’t upset just PayPal — it also steps on Google’s toes. Google also announced it was bringing web-based payments to its payment platform, Android Pay.

The mobile payment market is seriously heating up of late, and while PayPal has tried to keep up with apps for mobile, people tend to prefer more native payment systems, like those built by Apple for the iPhone or by Google for Android.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
Here’s a cool new app for people who treat every photo dump like a magazine spread
Mocha Frame is a tiny app makes every photo to look curated
Mocha Frame is a new iOS app

You're probably not a stranger to filters for your social media uploads. While some apps just fix up your shots with minor touch-ups, others want to change the entire look and feel. Mocha Frame takes things a little further. It doesn't just clean up your shots; it lets you frame them up or sign them before sharing them.

Mocha Frame, highlighted in a Reddit post by its developer, is an iPhone app built around presentation rather than heavy edits. The developer describes it as a tool for giving photos a cleaner, more elegant look before sharing, with minimal frames, Polaroid-style frames, creative collage layouts, and themed frames for different moods and festivals.

Read more
I tried turning the Red Magic 11S Pro into a handheld console, and it worked almost too well
Pushing Red Magic's liquid cooled gaming phone past the normal smartphone limit
Red Magic 11S Pro Review

One look at the Red Magic 11S Pro, and you can tell it's not trying to be subtle. This isn’t chasing the overly polished look and feel of a modern flagship smartphone. It isn’t trying to convince you it’s a great camera phone, either. This thing looks like it escaped from the desk of someone who still thinks transparent electronics are the peak of industrial design.

Many phones call themselves gaming phones, then spend half their time trying to look normal. The Red Magic 11S Pro has no such insecurity. The transparent back looks absolutely bonkers, with visible liquid cooling, RGB lighting, a flat glass-and-metal body, and a design that lives or dies by the fact that you either love gaming hardware or you don’t. The Nightfreeze unit I tested looked sleek.

Read more
The memory crisis isn’t going to ease, and you will pay the price for it, says a research firm
Forty to 50% higher this quarter, 30 to 40% more next quarter, and no real relief until 2028. Plan accordingly.
RAM memory chips

If you were hoping the memory crisis was about to ease up, I have some bad news for you. It comes directly from Wall Street.

Your next smartphone, laptop, or tablet could cost even more, regardless of whether it has recently been subject to a price hike.

Read more