Corporate Security Responsibility
All activities involving access to Mastercard assets, information, and networks comes with an inherent risk to the organization and, therefore, it is expected that every person working for, or on behalf of, Mastercard is responsible for information security and must:
Abide by Mastercard’s security policies and practices;
Ensure the confidentiality and integrity of the information being accessed;
Report any suspected information security violation or breach, and
Complete all periodic mandatory security trainings in accordance with Mastercard’s guidelines.
Full-Time
Facilitates secure digital payment transactions
No salary listed
Senior, Expert
Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship
Toronto, ON, Canada
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Mastercard operates in the payments industry, focusing on building an inclusive digital economy. The company connects people, financial institutions, governments, and businesses through secure data and networks. Mastercard facilitates transactions by charging fees to merchants and financial institutions for processing payments. It serves a wide range of clients across over 210 countries and territories, aiming to make transactions safe, simple, and accessible. By leveraging partnerships and technology, Mastercard promotes growth and sustainability. A key aspect of its culture is the decency quotient (DQ), which guides its operations and interactions.
Company Size
10,001+
Company Stage
M&A
Total Funding
$9M
Headquarters
Harrison, New Jersey
Founded
2007
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New Parent Leave
Inclusive Family Building Benefit
Employee Family Resource Program
Bereavement Leave
Dependent Scholarship
Employee Assitance Fund
Business Resource Groups
Employee Recognition
Flexible Work
Tuition Assistance
Travel Assistance
Matching Charitable Gifts
Mastercard has teamed with British FinTech Cardstream to promote open banking payments. The partnership will allow Cardstream to bolster its Payment Facilitation-as-a-Service (PFaaS) platform and allow customers to offer open banking payments to merchants and retailers throughout the U.K., the companies said in a Wednesday (May 7) news release. “There’s strong demand for open banking payments as a secure and convenient way to pay alongside cards,” Adam Sharpe, CEO of Cardstream, said in the announcement
Three of the world’s largest payment companies, Visa, Mastercard and PayPal, are racing into the next frontier in digital commerce: agentic AI. This week, all three announced they were deploying agentic commerce, a fast-emerging trend in which AI agents not only assist consumers with shopping but also complete transactions on their behalf. “These technologies have [] The post Visa, Mastercard, PayPal Fuel Agentic AI Commerce Boom appeared first on PYMNTS.com.
Welcome to the LatamList roundup, your bi-monthly summary of the Latin America startup scene.Fintechs took the spotlight in Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Mexico, and Chile during the second half of April. Here are the past two weeks’ key launches, expansions, and partnerships.ExpansionsBrazilian paytech PagBrasil launched in Portugal, making it easier for the Brazilian community to use Pix, a popular instant payment system from Brazil. PagBrasil also introduced Pix Roaming, which lets users make payments abroad without the high fees of credit cards and cash. Read more on: LatamfintechLaunchesEuropean fintech Revolut launched subscription plans for debit cards for users in Brazil. Users will get benefits like currency exchange discounts, lower fees for international transfers, and free ATM withdrawals. Plans cost between $1.7 and $14 per month
Stablecoin market capitalization reached an all-time high in April amid strong performance across cryptocurrency sectors, CoinDesk Data said in a report released Friday (May 2).After growing by 2.12% in April and seeing 19 consecutive months of gains, the stablecoin market cap reached $238 billion, according to the report.This growth was outpaced by that of other cryptocurrency sectors in April, however, so the market share held by stablecoins declined from 8.64% in March to 7.88% in April, the report said.The market cap of non-USD fiat stablecoins leaped 30% in April to reach $533 million. The report attributed the surge in demand to the volatility of the U.S. dollar that has been seen during the current U.S. tariff disputes.“As confidence in the dollar wavers, demand for non-USD fiat stablecoins has accelerated,” the report said. “In addition, gold-backed stablecoins have also gained traction as investors seek alternative stores of value, buoyed by the precious metal reaching new all-time highs in April.”Highlighting trends seen during April among the top 10 stablecoins, the report said the market cap of Tether (USDT) rose 2.26% to $148 billion, the market cap of USD Coin (USDC) rose 3.07% to reach its all-time high of $62.1 billion, and the market cap of First Digital Labs’ FDUSD dropped 46.2% to $1.25 billion after the stablecoin’s price lost its parity on April 2.Stablecoins are quietly becoming financial infrastructure, PYMNTS reported April 30.For example, in late April, Mastercard partnered with OKX and Nuvei to foster broader adoption of stablecoins, and Kraken introduced a solution to help financial institutions give clients access to crypto.In addition, the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins of 2025 (GENIUS) Act has emerged as a beacon of hope for crypto firms seeking clarity
Value-added services, once the free sprinkles card networks tossed on top of plain vanilla processing contracts, have become core product offerings in an industry racing to stand out and shore up margins. Competitive pressure, shrinking interchange spreads and merchants’ rising bargaining power are pushing processors “to expand into value-added services like analytics, rewards and lending, where the margins could be two to three times that of core processing,” said Vik Raman, vice president of product, enterprise at Trustly Inc., an open banking firm best known for its pay-by-bank rails. Core processing economics are being squeezed “by increased competition, regulatory intervention and merchant negotiation leverage from marketplaces and massive retailers,” Raman told PYMNTS as part of the “What’s Next in Payments” series. Capturing a bigger slice of global digital payments revenue now requires processors to layer on higher-value services that merchants cannot easily get elsewhere