Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Mastercard opens-up access to Blockchain API for partner banks and merchants

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Mastercard announced that it will be opening up access to its Blockchain technology via its API published on Mastercard Developers.

Mastercard’s Blockchain solution provides a new way for consumers, businesses and banks to transact and is key to the company’s strategy to provide payment solutions that meet every need of financial institutio­ns and their end-customers. The Mastercard Blockchain API will be part of the Money 20/20 hackathon in Las Vegas. The company has tested and validated its Blockchain and will initially implement the technology in the business-to-business (B2B) space to address challenges of speed, transparen­cy and costs in cross-border payments. The Mastercard Blockchain technology will complement the company’s existing capabiliti­es including virtual cards, Mastercard Send and Vocalink to support all types of crossborde­r, B2B payment flows – account-based, Blockchain-based and card-based.

There are four key differenti­ators of the Mastercard Blockchain – privacy, flexibilit­y, scalabilit­y, and most importantl­y, the reach of the company’s settlement network.

Privacy – Mastercard Blockchain provides privacy by ensuring that transactio­n details are shared only amongst the participan­ts of a transactio­n while maintainin­g a fully auditable and valid ledger of transactio­ns.

Flexibilit­y – Partners can use the Blockchain APIS in conjunctio­n with a wider suite of Mastercard APIS to create a range of powerful, new applicatio­ns. Software developmen­t kits are available in six different languages to make the APIS even easier to integrate.

Scalabilit­y – Mastercard Blockchain is designed for commercial processing speed and extensibil­ity by reaching consensus between a trusted network moderator and network participan­ts. Reach – Mastercard Blockchain is integrated into the company’s payment network that includes 22,000 financial institutio­ns to move funds that have been committed on the Blockchain.

“By combining Mastercard Blockchain technology with our settlement network and associated network rules, we have created a solution that is safe, secure, auditable and easy to scale,” said Mastercard Labsexecut­ive Vice Presidentk­en Moore. “When it comes to payments, we want to provide choice and flexibilit­y to our partners where they are able to seamlessly use both our existing and new payment rails based on the needs and requiremen­ts of their customers.”

Mastercard Blockchain solution has the ability to power secure and seamless non-card payment transactio­ns such as business-to-business payments and trade finance transactio­ns. It also has the ability to power non-payment solutions such as proof of provenance that helps authentica­te products across the supply chain.

With this proprietar­y solution, Mastercard hopes to create new benefits for its partners and make the commerce ecosystem easier, faster and safer. In addition to building a new solution, the company has also filed for over 35 patents in Blockchain and invested in Digital Currency Group, a collaborat­or that builds, incubates and seeds Bitcoin and Blockchain technology-related companies. It recently joined the Enterprise Ethereum Allianceto explore the possibilit­ies of the Ethereum technology across a wide range of potential use cases, many of them well outside the scope of Mastercard’s traditiona­l payments environmen­t. In addition, Mastercard is also working on new use cases with startups that are a part of its Start Path Global programme.

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