Affirm

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  • Affirm logo displayed on a phone screen is seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on August 16, 2021. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    Affirm's pay-over-time option comes to Canada through Amazon

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.22.2022

    Affirm's pay-over-time option has come to Canada thanks to a team-up with Amazon.

  • Economy Illustration

    Amazon is working on a buy-now-pay-later option

    by 
    Dana Wollman
    Dana Wollman
    08.27.2021

    Amazon has teamed up with Affirm, a major player in the buy-now-pay-later space. Amazon is testing this feature with select customers for now.

  • Timothy J. Seppala / Engadget

    Why sneakerheads are leaving eBay for Detroit startup StockX

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    02.16.2018

    Buying a pair of new rare sneakers is harder than reselling them on StockX. To buy new, the Yeezy or Jordan gods have to smile upon you, giving you that winning raffle ticket at a local store or letting you beat the bots online. To resell, all you have to do is go to the StockX website and set a price. You don't take photos or haggle with potential buyers. Instead, you look at what price the shoes are selling for and list your pair at whatever amount you think someone will pay for them. Like a stock exchange, buyer and seller identities are kept from one another. StockX acts as a middleman, only releasing payment once it verifies that goods are authentic. It's this simplicity that has helped the company earn so many loyal users. StockX was founded in 2015 after Quicken Loans founder and CEO Dan Gilbert bought Campless -- an online repository for sneaker sales data -- from Josh Luber. As part of the purchase, Luber moved from his native Philadelphia to the Detroit metro area, taking up the mantle of StockX CEO and working from Gilbert's One Campus Martius building downtown. In a little under three years, the company has become the go-to source for buying rare high-end shoes and streetwear.

  • Affirm

    Affirm’s app lends you money to buy things online

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    10.23.2017

    Paypal co-founder Max Levchin launched Affirm back in 2012 to extend credit for folks to buy things online. Today, his company has extended that feature to a mobile app, functionally creating a virtual credit card for anyone who wants to trust a tech company instead of banks.

  • PayPal co-founder Max Levchin returns to online payments with Affirm

    by 
    Zachary Lutz
    Zachary Lutz
    02.26.2013

    Curious what Max Levchin's been up to ever since he left Google in 2011? Well, wonder no more. Today, PayPal's co-founder revealed his return to the payment world with a new company called Affirm. Like many startups, Affirm is looking to make online payments quicker and easier, but the real question is whether you'll be willing to come along for the ride. AllThingsD managed to catch Levchin for an interview, in which he revealed that Affirm will issue credit to consumers and guarantee payment to merchants for all online transactions. Curiously, Affirm will use Facebook to verify a user's identity, and it'll also use a wide range of social and location-based data to determine an individual's credit worthiness. The payment startup will launch in beta with 1-800-Flowers as its partner, and it's said that consumers will be given 30 days to settle the resulting bill with Affirm. There's no word of what fees or interest rates will be assessed for late payments, but we imagine you'll find strong incentive to pay for that flower arrangement.