Boku and Zong launch mobile payments for Android devices

In a vote of confidence for Google’s mobile operating system, mobile payments providers Boku and Zong are announcing today they will enable their services for Android mobile devices.

Boku and Zong are rivals in the emerging market for mobile payments, which are turning out to be popular ways to pay for apps on phones and social networks. With these services, you can pay for an app by entering your mobile phone number and then verifying your transaction. You can then immediately use the app, with the cost billed to your mobile phone. It’s easier than entering a 16-digit credit card number.

Zong is enabling its one-click mobile payment solution for Android and is opening a private beta test for developers to integrate its payment option into their apps. Boku is doing pretty much the same thing with what it calls a “one-tap” mobile payment service, a play on the “one-click” payments popularized on the Web by Amazon.com.

Both services could be a shot in the arm for the Android apps market,which needs a lot of help in catching up with the iPhone. Both Zong and Boku already support iPhone transactions. But Android is growing fast, with more than 100,000 new Android phones activated each day. It just needs better monetization.

Ron Hirson, founder of San Francisco-based Boku, said in an interview that Boku will enable mobile payments for Android devices in 60 countries. Boku’s software development kit is in alpha testing now. Last week, Boku announced it raised a strategic investment round from Andreessen Horowitz.

Boku didn’t disclose the size of that round, but it previously raised $38 million in two prior rounds from Benchmark Capital, Index Ventures, Khosla Ventures and DAG Ventures.

Boku was founded in 2008 and bought the startups Mobillcash and Paymo to jumpstart its payments business. The company has 50 employees. Zong, meanwhile, raised $15 million in funding from Matrix Partners in April.

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About the Author,

Dean is lead writer for GamesBeat at VentureBeat. He covers video games, security, chips and a variety of other subjects. Dean previously worked at the San Jose Mercury News, the Wall Street Journal, the Red Herring, the Los Angeles Times, the Orange County Register and the Dallas Times Herald. He is the author of two books, Opening the Xbox and the Xbox 360 Uncloaked. Follow him on Twitter at @deantak, and follow VentureBeat on Twitter at @venturebeat.

  • http://venturebeat.com/2011/06/30/boku-expands-one-tap-billing-on-android-to-56-countries/ Boku expands one-tap billing on Android to 56 countries | VentureBeat

    [...] Boku previously announced its plans to move to Android and now it is releasing the production version of its Android software development kit, which game and app developers can use to make their apps enabled for mobile number payments. Zong, a rival to Boku, has also been testing its one-click payment system on Android. [...]

  • http://androidrockstar.com/?p=13829 Boku expands one-tap billing on Android to 56 countries

    [...] Boku previously announced its plans to move to Android, and now it is releasing the production version of its Android software development kit, which game and app developers can use to make their apps enabled for mobile number payments. Zong, a rival to Boku, has also been testing its one-click payment system on Android. [...]

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