Image: Amazon, Sharon McCutcheon/Unsplash
Amazon’s history with payments could haunt its crypto future

Good morning! This Tuesday, Amazon's payments business has always been an afterthought, Facebook is all in on the metaverse, Jeff Bezos wants all in on the moon, and employees are speaking out against Activision Blizzard.
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The news that Amazon was hiring a lead for a new digital currency and blockchain initiative sent the price of bitcoin soaring. Amazon quickly poured cold water on the speculation, saying that "notwithstanding our interest in the space, the speculation that has ensued around our specific plans for cryptocurrencies is not true."
But the company did say it's exploring crypto, and how it could work on Amazon. So wait: 13 years after Satoshi Nakamoto's white paper appeared on the internet, Amazon is just discovering cryptocurrency? That may be a bit unkind, but the truth is sometimes unkind.
Amazon has a long history of stumbles and missed opportunities in payments, which goes back more than two decades to the company's purchase of internet payments startup Accept.com.
It's hard to remember how crude payments were in those days. The website let customers who were afraid of inputting a full credit card number online phone or fax in the digits.
The problem was that Accept.com got swept up into the bowels of Amazon's infrastructure. The service its founders had envisioned — pay anyone, for anything, anywhere online — fell by the wayside.
Amazon had plenty of its own payments problems to solve, like fraud. An Accept.com employee, Jaya Kolhatkar, took charge of that effort, and got Amazon's fraud rate down to a reasonable level. And its 1-Click payments was a genuine innovation.
The pattern repeated in mobile payments and back-end payments. Amazon bought technology and hired a team from GoPago, the maker of a point-of-sale system that was challenging Square's iPad-based system for space on cafe counters, in 2013.
The counterargument is that adding Accept.com to Amazon was a huge win, even if it never became PayPal, because Amazon now handles a gigantic volume of payments, and even slight improvements add up. Adding anything to Amazon makes it big, because Amazon is big.
So now Amazon wants to hire someone to lead its crypto efforts. It sounds like a fun job, and a good way to learn a lot. Accept.com alumni have done well: Kolhatkar is now the executive vice president for data in Disney's direct-to-consumer business, and co-founders Erich Ringewald and Mark Britto are in top roles at PayPal. If the past is prologue, look for Amazon's crypto payments chief to be changing the world of commerce … somewhere else, after they leave.
— Owen Thomas (email | twitter)
A version of this story appeared on Protocol.com.
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