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Monday, December 01, 2003 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

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'Micropayments' idea pops up again

By Brian Bergstein
The Associated Press

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NEW YORK — An idea that seemingly evaporated along with dot-com mania is back: that the Internet would realize its full grass-roots potential if Web surfers could pay small amounts for tidbits of online content.

Several companies are again betting they can mine gold from ferrying around such "micropayments." Even credit-card giant Visa USA is exploring the prospect.

Boosters think people could sell countless new creations on the Internet — from essays to advice — if only mechanisms existed to facilitate small payments. For authors of popular content, all those pennies would add up.

The problem, as things now stand, is that transaction costs make most credit-card sales under $1 all but pointless.

By giving independent content providers an efficient way to collect money, micropayments could widen the Web's pool of things to see, hear and do, keeping the Internet from being dominated by media giants and other brand-name companies.

"We like to characterize ourselves as e-commerce for the rest of us," says Kurt Huang, co-founder of BitPass, which carries small payments to 100 Web sites and plans to emerge from "beta" test mode this month. "What we're trying to do is enable diversity."

Micropayment handlers know they're treading over the skeletons of 1990s companies — the likes of Flooz, Beenz, CyberCash and DigiCash — that tried and failed to create virtual currencies.

A renewed effort

Today's micropayment advocates say earlier attempts failed not just because they were cumbersome and lacked sufficient government and financial-industry support. People preferred what was familiar, namely credit cards.

As well, bountiful advertising money and venture capital inflated the Web with so much free content in the late 1990s that there wasn't much point in charging 25 cents to view a comic strip.

With free stuff now fading, much more online material is available only by subscription.

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"Times have definitely changed," said Ron Rivest, a prominent Massachusetts Institute of Technology encryption researcher who co-founded micropayment provider Peppercoin in 2001. "I think the market is ready."

There also are far more broadband Internet connections today, meaning more people might be interested in buying bandwidth-

intensive digital content a la carte. Witness the quick popularity of new online music services such as Apple's iTunes, which charges 99 cents per song. Those sites aren't using any special micropayment formula. Users often buy more than one song and establish prepaid accounts with a credit card.

But if competition pushes prices lower, and more individual artists want to sell tracks at their own Web sites, micropayment providers say they would be ideal helpers because they can track royalties and handle customer service.

Micropayment carriers are using different technologies to collect, transfer and authenticate payments. PaymentOne, for example, lets consumers make several small purchases online and pay for them on their local phone bills.

BitPass and Peppercoin invite Web surfers to set up an account with as little as $3, which is charged to a credit card or PayPal, the popular Internet money-exchange service. A user's online micropayments are deducted from that larger amount, without the hassle of entering credit-card information each time.

Here's the advantage for content providers: If you wanted to sell a poem for 20 cents, you wouldn't accept Visa or MasterCard, because the fees involved would drain most, if not all, of your 20 cents. Similarly, PayPal takes 2.9 percent of a sale plus 30 cents, so selling your 20-cent poem would be a dream deferred.

But with a micropayment carrier, you could expect to give up 15 percent. Your 20-cent poem would bring in a healthy 17 cents. And micropayment providers can make life easier by paying you $17 for every 100 poems, instead of 17 cents after each sale.

The trick for micropayment companies is to convince Web surfers that there's so much good online content available for nickels and dimes that it's worthwhile to bother stocking a prepaid account with a few bucks.

But some critics believe that will never happen en masse because of fundamental economic psychology: Few people are willing to spend time deciding whether to buy things individually, like newspaper articles, for pennies.

That is why subscription models that bundle a huge amount of content are attractive.

Such doubts have kept PayPal from breaking into micropayments.

Problem with micropayments

PayPal would figure to be a micropayment gorilla if it altered its fee structure for cheap items. With 35 million users, PayPal is the dominant peer-to-peer means of sending money online, especially at the auction site run by its parent company, eBay.

"The problem with micropayments, is, they're micro," said Todd Pearson, PayPal's managing director for merchant services. "Nobody's going to make a lot of money off these things."

A different kind of skepticism rules at RedPaper.com, which should be a micropayment carrier's dream. Sort of like an eBay for the written word, RedPaper launched in July and has 26,000 members who buy and sell prose, poetry and essays that each cost less than $1.

Members have to put at least $3 in a RedPaper account that gets docked or credited when they buy or sell material on the site. RedPaper takes 5.25 percent from sellers.

RedPaper set up its micropayment engine. Founder Mike Gaynor said it took only about a week's labor by one programmer.

Copyright © 2003 The Seattle Times Company

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