Boku aims to bridge micropay gap with mobile-phone ease

By Angela Gunn | Published June 17, 2009, 8:48 AM

boku logoA just-launched payment service would allow users to make purchases for virtual goods via their mobile phone, rather than by credit card or online payment service. Boku follows a model familiar to many mobile-phone users: an approved charge appearing on one's mobile bill.

Forget your late-'90s memories of Beenz and such; the pay-by-mobile model is already quite popular in Asia, and virtual goods -- an $8 billion annual market, according to Boku -- are a good fit.

A YouTube video shows the process in action. On a Boku-ready site, you'd find whatever it is you need to buy and choose the Boku payment option. The system asks for your mobile provider and your phone number, both of which you presumably know, and sends a confirmation to your mobile, which you'll need to have handy. Responding to the confirmation triggers the transaction, and the charge appears on your monthly bill in the usual Premium SMS fashion.

Such a service could be catnip not only for the under-18 crowd (which, in theory, does not have credit cards) but for shoppers in other countries. To that end, Boku says it has inked deals with 170 mobile carriers in 50 countries, potentially reaching 1.6 billion potential shoppers. US Boku-friendly carriers include Alltel, AT&T, Cellular One, Sprint Nextel (including Boost), T-Mobile, US Cellular, Verizon, and Virgin. And Boku says also that more people have mobile phones than have bank accounts -- 4 billion to 2 billion -- making a mobile account the closest thing billions of people have to a credit line.

Among the games and applications currently accepting Boku payments are Aeria Games, Puzzle Pirates, Premium Football, and Facebook's Texas Hold'Em Poker and (fluff) Friends -- and Mafia Wars, that ubiquitous menace to productivity.

In addition, Boku announced Monday that it has acquired two smaller mobile-payment firms (Paymo and Mobillcash) and raised $13 million in venture capital. CEO and co-founder Mark Britto, pronouncing himself "thrilled" to be unveiling his system after five months of stealth mode, said of the business-side developments, "The strength of these two acquisitions and our recent financing will help us strategically to enable global consumer adoption and accelerate global carrier coverage."

View comments by with a score of at least

Latest Firefox 3.6 beta fixes 133 bugs, promises faster page load times

A once-sluggish beta testing process has kicked into overdrive, with astonishing success at finding serious bugs. Will Mozilla be able to fix all the others in time?

Apple invokes DMCA, claims Psystar is 'trafficking in circumvention devices'

In trying to close the book on possibly the last attempt at a Mac clone, Apple cites from its own landmark case...but may actually be misinterpreting it.

The fallacy of Facebook privacy

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: If an insurance company learns something interesting about its client through the Internet, is that snooping?

Microsoft 'worked with Apple' for Silverlight on iPhone, says Goldfarb

By not making such a big deal out of trying to stream video to the iPhone, Microsoft got a big deal out of it, revealed the Silverlight product manager.

Confirmed: Office 2010 to ship in June

Two weeks after Microsoft had been expected to draw a clearer roadmap for its principal applications suite, it's finally ready to commit to the end of H1.

New EU antitrust commissioner will oversee Microsoft, Oracle+Sun, Intel issues

As one of Europe's most prominent politicians shifts positions in January, her replacement remains a question mark over technology's biggest issues.

Without its own 'iTablet' yet, is Apple missing the boat?

Steve Jobs is on record as dissing "single-purpose" devices like e-readers. But given their recent popularity, was that a mistake?

Not-so-mobile battery life: Time to force the issue

Carmi Levy | Wide Angle Zoom: If power efficiency is important when you buy a car or even a motorcycle, why shouldn't it matter for a smartphone?

Clicker.com cuts through the Web video chaos

In a world where homemade video and Hollywood movies travel the same pipeline, it's good to have a real search engine to cut through the clutter.

Microsoft's Ray Ozzie: 'Nobody's going to be 100% open'

The mobile apps ecosystems of the world may converge over time, led by apps being ported over across platforms, according to the Chief Software Architect.

A case study in improving software: What Office 2010 can learn from Notion 3

A music composition product gambles with a complete overhaul, in an effort to make headway against two well-known competitors in a tough market.