All told, it's probably not a huge surprise to hear that a company with a long-standing focus on mobile payments will, you know, continue to focus on mobile payments. That said, many of Venmo's ardent web users aren't taking the news very well — the fact that Venmo didn't see fit to tell anyone why it made the decision it did, or what the Venmo web experience would ultimately look like, certainly didn't help matters. A statement obtained by TechCrunch, however, shines a little more light on this whole thing: while payments and charges can no longer be handled from the Venmo site, you'll still be able to use it for cashing out balances and accessing your settings and statements.

That's pretty barebones compared to what you'd see if you logged into the site just a few days ago, but at least now the company's priorities are now clear: as convenient as the web interface was, it would never be as important to Venmo's business as its apps are. Whether this doubling-down on the mobile experience will help the PayPal subsidiary maintain its lead over one of its biggest rivals remains to be seen, though — a recent report suggests that Zelle, a competitor dreamed up by a handful of US banks — is on track to surpass Venmo in terms of users by the end of the year.