Bitcoin Daily: WHO Debuts MiPasa Blockchain To Share Covid-19 Data; Coinbase’s Retail Payments Portal Passes $200M Transactions Processed

Bitcoin daily

The World Health Organization (WHO) is working with blockchain and other tech companies on a program to help convey data about the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which it is calling MiPasa.

    Get the Full Story

    Complete the form to unlock this article and enjoy unlimited free access to all PYMNTS content — no additional logins required.

    yesSubscribe to our daily newsletter, PYMNTS Today.

    By completing this form, you agree to receive marketing communications from PYMNTS and to the sharing of your information with our sponsor, if applicable, in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.

    The program is a distributed ledger technology (DLT) that will hopefully help with early detection of the virus and identifying carriers and hotspots.

    MiPasa is built on top of Hyperledger Fabric in partnership with IBM, computer firm Oracle, enterprise blockchain platform HACERA and IT corporation Microsoft. It purports to be “fully private” and share information between need-to-know organizations like state authorities and health officials.

    Described by creators as “an information highway,” MiPasa cross-references siloed location data with health information. It promises to protect patient privacy and to help monitor local and global trends such as the virus that has now sent the world spiraling into chaos and uncertainty in recent weeks.

    The U.S., European, and Chinese Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Hong Kong Department of Health, the Government of Canada and China’s National Health Commission have all worked with the project.

    But regardless of the current world disorder, people haven’t ceased paying for things in bitcoin, if the recent $200 million in transactions logged on retailer payment portal Coinbase Commerce are any indication.

    The number, announced Thursday, March 26, is a milestone for the company. It encompasses 8,000 integrated retailers that have adopted crypto payments as valid. In the middle of the current coronavirus-caused chaos, this has been a bright spot for the form.

    Commerce product lead John Zettler said bitcoin was still far and away the leader of the pack in terms of the types of crypto used for payment, due mostly to familiarity.

    HSBC has plans to jettison its paper-based private placement records project throughout this year and next year, and has put $10 billion into it as of Sunday, March 29.

    Ciaran Roddy, head of custody innovation and strategy initiatives at HSBC, said the next 12 to 18 months should be able to garner interest, and that he was “confident” they could exponentially increase the project’s size.

    HSBC has been using the blockchain space despite a lack of ambition to move into crypto space. This, the company said, is because it wants to tokenize the private placements after digitizing them. Currently, HSBC has no plans to encroach on the crypto space.

    The project is slower than anticipated — HSBC said it wanted to have $20 billion by now, but that couldn’t be achieved due to ongoing efforts tinkering with the functionality of the technology.


    EazyPay Deploys Mastercard Receivables Manager for B2B Transactions in Bahrain

    Mastercard

    Eazy Financial Services, which does business as EazyPay, has become the first acquirer in Bahrain to adopt Mastercard Receivables Manager.

      Get the Full Story

      Complete the form to unlock this article and enjoy unlimited free access to all PYMNTS content — no additional logins required.

      yesSubscribe to our daily newsletter, PYMNTS Today.

      By completing this form, you agree to receive marketing communications from PYMNTS and to the sharing of your information with our sponsor, if applicable, in accordance with our Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.

      The company will use this solution to help merchants in Bahrain automate their B2B virtual card receivables, according to a Tuesday (July 29) press release.

      “EazyPay supports businesses with digital payment solutions designed to simplify operations and elevate the customer experience,” Nayef Tawfeeq Al Alawi, founder, managing director and CEO at EazyPay, said in the release. “As virtual cards gain traction for supplier payments, Mastercard Receivables Manager empowers us to strengthen the B2B payments ecosystem across key industries and large market segments.”

      Mastercard Receivables Manager eliminates manual processes by streamlining the capture of virtual card payments, processing them straight through and delivering remittance data directly to merchants’ accounting systems, according to the release.

      For merchants, this adds up to better efficiency, working capital and cash flow, per the release.

      “At Mastercard, we are committed to delivering value-added services that help acquirers and their merchants operate more efficiently,” Saud Swar, country manager, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan and other Levant at Mastercard, said in the release. “Receivables Manager addresses a critical challenge for suppliers managing high volumes of virtual card payments by automating processing, reducing time and boosting efficiency.”

      Mastercard announced Tuesday that it launchedwidescale global availability” of Mastercard Receivables Manager, two years after the introduction of the automated solution for virtual cards.

      Since the product’s debut in July 2023, Mastercard Receivables Manager has been enhanced with new capabilities such as multi-language and secure card-on-file to support digital commerce around the world.

      The PYMNTS Intelligence reportVirtual Mobility: How Mobile Virtual Cards Elevate B2B Paymentsfound that virtual cards can deliver security, efficiency and return on investment to B2B payments.

      In an earlier collaboration between Mastercard and EazyPay, the companies teamed up in January 2023 to enhance EazyPay’s eCommerce offerings with Mastercard Payment Gateway Services (MPGS), which is now known as Mastercard Gateway.

      Before that, in June 2021, the two companies worked together to equip smallto medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and micromerchants with online payment technologies and access to financial services.

      For all PYMNTS B2B coverage, subscribe to the daily B2B Newsletter.