By Elizabeth Blakey E-Commerce Times
07/12/01 4:25 PM PT
NACHA said that 36 organizations, including 12 financial
institutions, have signed on to the project, which has targeted January for
completion of its e-commerce transfers standard.
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Membership targets for Project ACTION -- a program through which consumers and businesses
would initiate payments to a seller via their own financial institutions, rather than
authorizing the seller to debit their accounts -- have been reached, the
Electronic Payments Association announced Tuesday.
According to the not-for-profit association, also known as the National Automated Clearing
House Association (NACHA), Project ACTION enhances security of payments while reducing
many of the risks.
"There are currently no guaranteed payments on the Internet
today," NACHA spokesperson Michael Herd told the E-Commerce Times.
"So the ACTION model would be an improvement, should it come to
pass."
"ACTION can solve the authentication, security and privacy issues associated with
authorizing payments on the Internet," project chairman Charles B. Bretz said.
"The ACTION model provides compelling benefits for buyers and sellers on the Internet,
and represents new business opportunities for financial institutions."
Members supporting the initiative have defined their main objective as the development of a detailed
business case for a core product to support consumer-to-business payments, consumer
bill payments, and business-to-business payments.
Project ACTION, which stands for ACH Credit Transactions
Initiated Online, is an independent membership program
within NACHA.
January Launch Targeted
Project ACTION Internet transactions will be conducted using Automated
Clearing House (ACH) credits. The ACH network is the transfer system that clears most of
the electronic payments sent between banks and other financial institutions in the United States.
NACHA said that 36 organizations, including 12 financial
institutions, have signed on to the project, which has targeted January for
completion of its e-commerce transfers standard.
According to Herd, merchants would no longer be
required to authenticate the purchaser making
the online payment. Instead, the payment model relies on the existing
relationship between the purchaser and his financial institution, and also
gives the bank the opportunity to charge a fee for the
e-payment service.
"An advantage of the ACH Network is the ability to process
credit payments in which funds are pushed to sellers
or other payment recipients," said Elliott C. McEntee,
president and chief executive officer of
NACHA. "Currently, other payment methods require account
information to be provided to sellers, that then
attempt to authenticate the buyer and pull
funds from buyers' accounts."
Big Agenda
Project ACTION will address the business and technical requirements for
processing ACH credits online, including the fee structure and revenue
model, as well as the framework for dispute resolution and chargebacks.
The members have also determined that ACTION will initially
focus on ACH credit payments.
"Although the ACTION model may turn out to
be applicable to other payment networks, we will be developing
the initial business case based on use of the ACH credit," Bretz said.
Thane Plambeck of VeriSign (Nasdaq: VRSN) and
Rebecca Watson of the U.S. Postal Service
are some of the high-profile e-commerce leaders that
were elected to the project's Steering Committee, while
JP Morgan Chase, the State Employees' Credit Union and
TeleCheck are among the latest organizations to join to
the group.
"NACHA set a goal of 25 members, including 10
financial institutions, by July 1st to get Project ACTION off the ground,"
said McEntee. "Project ACTION has exceeded this membership goal,
reflecting the strong interest in the project in the financial services industry."
Wide Representation
Other members of Project ACTION include: Bank One,
CheckFree Corporation, Citibank, Fidelity Investments,
FirstWebBancorp, Fort Knox National Company,
InteliData Technologies Corp., iBill, LML Payment Systems,
Mid-America Payment Exchange, Network 1 Financial,
VeriSign Inc. and Wells Fargo Bank.
In addition to the ACH clearinghouse network itself, the
U.S. Federal Reserve, the Electronic Payments Network and
credit card powerhouse Visa act as ACH Operators -- or central clearing facilities --
through which financial institutions transmit or receive ACH entries.
NACHA represents more than 12,000 financial institutions in the United States.