Sunday, March 29, 2020
Electronic Banking Essays - Payment Systems, E-commerce, Banking
  Electronic Banking    The Electronic Banking Association (EBA) is a non-profit organization  established to do one simple thing-help more people get started with electronic  banking. Here's why. Who taught you how to write paper checks? Probably your  parent's right? Well, who's going to teach you how to write electronic checks?    Probably NOT your parents. That's where they come in. E-banking is so much more  convenient and so much quicker that everyone should know about it. The EBA was  established as an independent source of helpful information about electronic  banking for consumers and businesses. Financial institutions, merchants, and  other financial service firms actually provide financial e-commerce services,  but the Electronic Banking Association (EBA) monitors progress in the financial  e-commerce industry and provides information that will enable users of those  services to become better informed and to locate providers of the services they  seek. Everyone hates paying bills. It's time-consuming, frustrating, and you  have to lick that awful envelope glue. But not with e-banking. You'll spend less  time paying bills, and more time doing fun stuff. Here are some advantages to  e-banking: - No more paper checks. Your computer remembers who you write checks  to. You simply enter an amount then point-and-click. You'll never run out of  checks again. - No more hassles. You can schedule your payments in advance, so  they'll get paid while you're on vacation or away on business. Electronic  payments are processed quickly, in as little as 24 hours to 5 days (unlike a  paper check sent in the mail, which takes an average of 10 days to post). - No  more envelopes to lick. No envelope glue. No paper cuts on your tongue. And you  can stop writing your return address again, and again, and again. - No more  writer's cramp. It takes forever to write checks and addresses every month.    E-banking cuts that time to practically nothing. - No more stamps. With  e-banking, there's no postage and your bills are processed quickly - whenever  you want them paid. You can pay your bills online, so it only makes sense to  receive them that way, too. This is called "Electronic Bill    Presentment," and more and more businesses are going to offer it. - No more  lost bills. Your dog can't eat electronic bills. Your kids can't misplace them.    And you can't lose them under a stack of catalogs. - Pay bills when you want to.    Not when the post office decides to deliver them. Click to see it. Click to pay  it. Your bills appear right on your computer screen and look much like the  printed bills you are used to getting. But the difference is you can pay them  with just the click of a mouse. - Better record keeping. All your billing and  payment information is kept in one convenient location, not in messy cardboard  boxes or goodness only knows where else. You can pay your bills online, so it  only makes sense to receive them that way, too. This is called "Electronic    Bill Presentment," and more and more businesses are going to offer it. In  addition to paying bills online, you can get current information any time you  want it. So you can get up-to-date account balances, transfer funds, obtain  information about check clearing; all sorts of things. You can import this  information directly into today's popular financial management programs such as    Quicken? without having to re-enter it. You buy things all the time with credit  cards, right? Well then, those are electronic transactions just like these.    Today's latest Web browsers have sophisticated encryption that's very secure.    What's more, electronic checks are safer than having paper checks lying around  where anyone can obtain and misuse your account information. Experts predict it  would take a hacker over 2,000 years to crack 56-bit encryption. Yet many  financial institutions today require a browser that supports 128-bit encryption,  which would take about 12,710,204,652,610,000,000,000,000 years to crack. Now  that's secure. (Source: Byte Magazine) When you're ready to open an e-banking  account, you can receive more information on security, as well as a recent  browser that supports 128-bit encryption, through your financial institution or  at the Netscape and Microsoft Web sites. In the time it takes you to pay your  bills the old-fashioned way, you can be up and running with e-banking. Best of  all, once you enter who you pay bills to, you'll never have to re-enter that  information. Your financial institution may offer e-banking via the Web or a  personal financial manager or both. Web-based e-banking is generally easier and  quicker to set up. All you'll need is a recent    
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