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Apple, Alibaba may team up to launch Apple Pay in China

apple-pay_retail_660_102914123840 Apple, Alibaba may team up to launch Apple Pay in China

Apple CEO Tim Cook said Apple’s new mobile payment system had over 1 million activations in the first three days after it became available, and is now more widely used than any competing payment system.

“We’re already No 1. We’re more than the total of the other guys,” the Apple CEO boasted on Monday during a tech industry conference, “and we’ve only been at it a week.” Cook said Visa and MasterCard officials told Apple that the its mobile payment system was already seeing more use than similar “contactless” methods of paying for purchases.

While Apple has partnered with major banks and large retail chains including Macy’s, Walgreen and McDonald’s, critics have noted that it is not accepted by a number of other large chains. Among them are the drugstore chains CVS Caremark and Rite Aid, which belong to a retail coalition working on a rival system.

Cook also said he plans to talk with Jack Ma, executive chairman of China-based e-commerce giant Alibaba, later this week about a possible partnership, although he offered no details. Ma told the same audience earlier on Monday that he would be “very interested” in teaming with Apple to bring Apple Pay to China.

The two executives spoke during separate appearances on an outdoor stage on the opening night of a three-day tech conference organised by The Wall Street Journal.

Responding to questions, Cook also said he expected Apple’s iPhone to continue to be the company’s biggest-selling product, contributing the majority of the technology major’s revenue and profit, for the next few years. But he boasted that sales of Apple’s Mac computers are growing faster than the overall personal computer industry, which has struggled in recent years.

The Apple CEO also touted the upcoming release of the company’s smartwatch and dropped broad hints about Apple’s work on a new television product, which has been rumored for years.

Today’s televisions have not advanced much technologically in the last 30 years, Cook said. “So I think there’s a lot to be done here.”

The Apple CEO did not offer specifics, but he said, “It’s an area where I’m optimistic that there is something great that can be done in the space.”

Apple started operating the Apple Pay service last week, offering it only in the United States to start, and only for users of its newest models of iPhones and iPads. The company has touted the privacy and security features of its service, which uses a sophisticated encryption system to let users charge purchases on credit card accounts without having to show their card or account number.

Repeating a favorite dig at competitors such as Google and Facebook, Cook said Apple does not collect user data or purchase information. “We don’t want to know what you buy. We’re not Big Brother; we’ll leave that to other people.”

Speaking earlier, Ma said he is looking for a variety of US partners for his company Alibaba Group, the Chinese e-retailer that held a record stock market debut on Wall Street earlier in September. Ma said he was visiting Hollywood film studios this week to discuss potential deals, because “China will be the largest movie market in the world” in the next 10 or 15 years.

Alibaba operates several Internet services, including retail sites, online payments and streaming video. The Executive Chairman said Alibaba is also helping U.S. food producers, including cherry farmers from Washington state and fishermen from Alaska, sell their harvests in China.

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