JCPenney has removed Apple Pay support from its stores and app without giving a reason, and customers are furious
- Department store chain JCPenney said in a statement that it will no longer support Apple Pay in its stores or mobile app.
- Many customers are now saying they will take their business elsewhere.
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JCPenney, the American department store chain that's been around for 117 years, announced on Twitter that it will no longer support Apple Pay in its stores or online.
JCPenney acknowledged this move for the first time on Saturday, in a response to a customer on Twitter.
JCPenney has not provided a rationale for this decision. While the company did respond to the complaint on Twitter, it didn't answer the customer's actual question, which was "Why would you remove a very secure form of payment?"
As you could imagine, many customers have responded to JCPenney's tweet expressing their displeasure.
Apple created Apple Pay because plastic credit cards are vulnerable: A credit card can be stolen, and its important numbers and security codes are exposed by default. In contrast, Apple Pay works by touching your iPhone or Apple Watch to an NFC reader, and all of your personal identifying information remains private and secure. Apple doesn't see your data, or share it with any third parties.
It's unclear why a large company like JCPenney wants Apple Pay out of its retail experience, but we've seen this before. In 2014, shortly after the launch of Apple Pay, a handful of retailers decided to disallow Apple's new mobile payments solution. Most of these companies debuted their own versions of Apple Pay: CVS made "CVS Pay," Walmart made "Walmart Pay," etc. A bunch of retailers even tried making one payments app to rule them all, called CurrentC. But many of these Apple Pay alternatives failed, or the companies eventually relented: for example, CVS is now accepting Apple Pay as of October 2018.
It's possible JCPenney chose to remove Apple Pay because it wants more data about its customers, and Apple Pay data is not shared with third parties. That data can be extremely valuable to a chain like JCPenney, which has been struggling over the last decade: its number of stores, number of employees, and total revenue has steadily declined since 2007.
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