The present invention generally relates to near field communications (NFC). More specifically, the present invention relates to a user of a user electronic device equipped with a near field data communication interface that performs financial transactions at point of sale terminals according to set of parameters configured at a billing statement network.
Near field data communications (NFC) are currently being used by consumers to make secure financial transactions when purchasing goods or services. NFC is a standardized wireless data communication technology that communicates information over short distances. NFC commonly communicates using a frequency of 13.56 megahertz (MHz) with data rates approaching 424 kilo-bits per second (Kbps/sec). NFC equipped devices of various sorts are available in the marketplace today.
Users of NFC equipped devices currently cannot view a statement that identifies details of purchases made using their user device. Users of NFC data communication interface equipped user device are also currently without a way to setup rules that govern whether an item may be purchased by a particular user device using NFC data communications. Furthermore, there is no systematic way for users of a user device to keep track of NFC purchases with pictures and/or annotations made at the time of the purchase.
There is a need in the art for a system and method where a user device allows for identification, tracking, annotation, and photographing of information relating to purchases made using a near field data communication interface on a mobile device. Such a system and method would allow the user monitor purchase activity by viewing a statement, and would allow a user to regulate purchase activity of the user device according to a set of rules stored in a remote location.
Embodiments of the present invention include a system and a method for tracking financial transactions using mobile electronic devices equipped with a near field communication (NFC) data communication interface. A method of the present invention may include a user entering information relating to a financial account into a graphical user interface displayed on a display at a mobile electronic device. The information entered may then be transmitted over a data communication interface to a billing statement network that responds by sending billing statement information back to the user device, and the billing statement information may then be received by the user device over the data communication interface. The billing statement information from the billing statement network may be displayed in a graphical user interface (GUI) on a display at the user device. In certain instances the billing statement information is displayed according to a set of settings or parameters set by the user of the user device at an earlier time. The billing statement information may also identify purchases that were purchased over a NFC data communication interface.
Embodiments of the present invention include a system and a method for processing payments at private enterprises using mobile electronic devices equipped with near field data communication (NFC) functionality.
Mobile electronic devices described herein include, but are not limited to smartphones, iPhones, Android phones, iPads, notebook computers, computers built into a car, and mobile devices dedicated to performing NFC communications. Mobile devices may include a processor, and a memory. Mobile devices may also or alternatively include a field programmable gate array (FPGA), or a an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC).
The various methods may be performed by software operating in conjunction with hardware. For example, instructions executed by a processor, the instructions otherwise stored in a non-transitory computer readable medium such as memory. Various interfaces may be implemented—both communications and interface. One skilled in the art will appreciate the various requisite components of a mobile device and integration of the same with one or more of the figures and/or descriptions included herein.
A private payment network as described herein includes, but is not limited to a computer and a computer server.
The basic payment process of
The user device includes a communication interface, a NFC data communication interface, a global positioning system (GPS), a NFC payment application (App) that includes a graphical user interface (GUI), and an NFC database. The NFC payment application may communicate with the NFC payment authorization system over the NFC data communication information and over a NFC data communication interface at the point of sale terminal.
The communication interface communicating over the cloud or internet may be any communication interface, including but not limited to Bluetooth, Wi-Fi (802.11), or a cellular 3G-4G LTE network. Other communications networks, protocols, and standards may be used. The NFC database is depicted as including historical information relating to financial transactions that the user has previously performed. For example, the database includes a transaction for the amount of $51.50 occurred at Starbucks at 12:01 pm at a GPS location (XX, YY).
In operation, the user device may communicate using NFC data communications with the point of sale terminal that in turn may communicate with the general payment authorization system that may communicate with the billing statement network when processing a transaction. The billing statement network may then communicate with the user device over the cloud or internet a communication relating to the transaction. The billing statement network may also arrange for a hard copy statement to be mailed to the user after the transaction is complete.
The account summary includes an account balance, credits, purchase information, NFC purchase history information, transfer information, interest earned, and a new balance. The payment information includes a partial credit card number, a partial debit card number, and previous payment history (i.e., NFC on Bob iPhone 6). The account activity includes a plurality of fields that include: a transaction date, a merchant name, a transaction identifier (ID), a device name, a GPS location, a transaction amount, and an optional image. The statement tracks transactions performed at various merchants and cross references a device name that was used to perform the transaction with other information. Image information may be a photo taken at the time that the transaction occurred. An example transaction occurred on November 12 at Dennys diner using a debit card for an amount of $15.50. Since this transaction was processed using a debit card, no GPS location data or image data is available. In contrast, a second example transaction that occurred on November 11 at Shaw grocery was processed using a NFC communication interface on Barbara Android phone. This second example transaction occurred at GPS location (xx, yy) and includes image data.
Statement information may be downloaded to quicken accounting software when the download statement to quicken selection box is selected. A user may view or change rules that enable, disable, or configure NFC communications at the user device. A user may also view the NFC map GUI by selecting the view NFC map GUI selection box.
The user device NFC rules GUI indicates that allowed NFC devices are Bob iPhone 6, and Barbara Android tablet.
The GPS to merchant check software may check the GPS location of a user device and a merchant to see if they are in the same location when authorizing a purchase. The base software in
The design statement module is a software module that may allow a user to customize how their billing statements appear. For example, a user may configure their statement to include an icon of an image acquired during purchases in the statement when an image is available. The NFC rules software is a software module that may enforce rules setup by a user of the user device. The rules GUI as discussed in respect to
Finally, the payment database in
The third step in
Next in a fifth step of the flowchart a third determination is determined. The third determination step may determine that the purchase should be processed. When it is confirmed that the purchase should be processed, program flow flows to a sixth step in
Next in step nine of the flow chart as illustrated in
In an eleventh step of the flow chart, the user may be allowed to view NFC purchases made on a digital map displayed in a GUI at the user device. The map may include the geo-location where the purchase was made. Finally, in a twelfth step of the flow chart, a user may retrieve a billing statement and view that statement in a statement GUI.
The fourth step of the flow chart determines whether the location where the purchase is being performed is an approved location, when yes, program flow moves to a fifth step of the flow chart. When the location is an approved location, program flow moves to a fifth step of the flow chart, otherwise program flow moves to the step where the purchase is cancelled. The fifth step in the flow chart determines whether the amount or cost of the purchase is an allowed amount. When the amount is an allowed amount, program flow flows to a sixth step in the flow chart where the purchase is confirmed. When the amount is not allowed program flow moves from the fifth step to the step where the purchased is cancelled.
The second step of the flow chart is also a providing step where a user device may be provided with a NFC communication interface, another communication interface, a GPS system, an NFC payment App and GUIs, and an NFC database. In the second step of the flow chart, a user device may communicate over the cloud or internet with the billing statement network of
The third step of the flow chart may allow a user to setup NFC rules in the billing statement network over a GUI displayed on a display at the user device. Then in a fourth step of the flow chart the NFC rules may be stored in a payment database at the billing statement network. Next in a fifth step of the flow chart, the user may be allowed to initiate an NFC payment transaction.
The sixth step of the flow chart is where base software at the billing statement network may be executed. Then in a seventh step, the user may be allowed to input annotations or images relating to the purchase over an image/notes GUI at the user device. The eighth step of the flow chart is where the images and/or the annotations input in step seven may be stored in the payment database of the billing statement network.
In step nine of
Finally, in step ten of the flow chart a user may be allowed to view a billing statement sent from the billing statement network. The statement may be viewed over a billing GUI or a map GUI on the user device.
While various embodiments have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. The descriptions are not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular forms set forth herein. Thus, the breadth and scope of a preferred embodiment should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments. It should be understood that the above description is illustrative and not restrictive. To the contrary, the present descriptions are intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims and otherwise appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art. The scope of the invention should, therefore, be determined not with reference to the above description, but instead should be determined with reference to the appended claims along with their full scope of equivalents.
The present application claims the priority benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 62/093,028 filed Dec. 17, 2014 entitled “Payments Data Source Tagging for Accounts Statements,” the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
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