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India resists lobbying by US payment firms to ease local data storage rules
India's central bank is standing firm on a directive to compel global payment firms to store customer data in India, resisting calls from U.S. companies to dilute an order they say would cost them millions of dollars, people familiar with the matter said.

The payment companies are worried India's data onshoring move could set a precedent and nudge other major governments to implement similar rules at a time when there is heightened scrutiny on how companies globally handle their customers' data.

The industry's tussle with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) also comes as Prime Minster Narendra Modi aggressively pushes digital and cashless modes of payment that leave an electronic trail as part of a campaign to crack down on the black economy.

While Modi's administration is working on a separate data protection law, foreign companies were caught off guard in April by the RBI's one-page directive that said all payments data should within six months be stored only in the country for "unfettered supervisory access". The RBI said storing data locally would help "ensure better monitoring".

A joint lobbying effort by American Express Co, Mastercard Inc and Visa Inc to dilute or reverse the directive has failed to shift the central bank's position, with the RBI telling the firms in a meeting this month to comply, not complain, sources with direct knowledge told Reuters.

The RBI declined to comment, but a government source with direct knowledge confirmed the central bank was "unlikely to back down on its plans".

INVESTMENT PLANS

The card companies are nervous that the move will disrupt their investment plans, as millions of dollars are diverted from other projects in a scramble to open local data centres within six months. "There is a feeling of helplessness and we will have to comply," said a source with direct knowledge of the meetings.

The RBI's insistence that payments data be stored "only in India" would hamper global fraud detection and the companies should be allowed to keep a back-up, the sources said.

The government source disagreed. "The suggestion that you need a disaster management back-up centre overseas just does not cut it," said the source, who declined to be identified. "This is not a small island nation that would get entirely crippled by a single natural disaster."

Mastercard said it was working with the industry to engage the RBI "to understand their need for access to domestic data and work towards a solution that meets the regulatory requirements" in line with global norms.

Visa declined to comment, while American Express did not respond to a request for comment.

The move would not impact local players such as Softbank Group-backed Indian digital payments firm Paytm, as well as homegrown card payment network RuPay, which competes with the likes of Visa and Mastercard, as they already store their data in India.

ONLY IN INDIA
The industry says India's proposed data storage rules would be among the world's most restrictive. China also tightened cyber regulation in the past year, formalising new rules that require firms to store data locally. None of the global payment card companies, however, operate in the Chinese domestic market yet. Countries such as Russia and Indonesia also have an onshore data storage requirement, but they do not restrict companies from transfer of transactions data offshore as well, according to lobby group U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC), which counts the three U.S. card companies among its members.

Global payment firms currently store and process Indian transactions outside the country and a major concern to the industry is a clause in the RBI's order that asks for data to be stored "only in India", two sources said. That, according to the industry, would restrict the transfer of data needed to effectively detect and analyse global fraud patterns, and make India more vulnerable to financial crime. In a letter dated May 3, seen by Reuters, the USIBC pressed the RBI for a "reversal or an indefinite stay" of its directive, which it said would make India's payments ecosystem more prone to cyber-attacks. It also urged the RBI to remove any restriction on transferring the data outside India and specify the time period for which the data needed to be stored locally.

An industry executive at a U.S. payments firm said while the RBI was likely to soon issue clarifications to address some of their concerns, but it would not change the notification's implementation date. In an earnings call last month, Visa CEO Alfred Kelly Jr. referred to the RBI's six-month deadline as a "tough timeframe".

The directive comes as more people in India are switching to plastic money, partly driven by the Modi's decision to replace high-value currency notes in November 2016, since when the government has aggressively discouraged cash transactions. In March, Indians clocked transactions worth $52 billion using their 900 million credit and debit cards, nearly double the amount recorded in November 2016, data from the RBI showed.

But fraud is a concern too. The RBI recorded 57,411 cases of card fraud totalling $43 million in the three years to December 2017, according to a Right to Information response seen by Reuters.

The RBI in April said the payment ecosystem in India had "expanded considerably", making it necessary to ensure "the safety and security" of data.
India resists lobbying by US payment firms to ease local data storage rules
 
India resists lobbying by US payment firms to ease local data storage rules
India's central bank is standing firm on a directive to compel global payment firms to store customer data in India, resisting calls from U.S. companies to dilute an order they say would cost them millions of dollars, people familiar with the matter said.

The payment companies are worried India's data onshoring move could set a precedent and nudge other major governments to implement similar rules at a time when there is heightened scrutiny on how companies globally handle their customers' data.

The industry's tussle with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) also comes as Prime Minster Narendra Modi aggressively pushes digital and cashless modes of payment that leave an electronic trail as part of a campaign to crack down on the black economy.

While Modi's administration is working on a separate data protection law, foreign companies were caught off guard in April by the RBI's one-page directive that said all payments data should within six months be stored only in the country for "unfettered supervisory access". The RBI said storing data locally would help "ensure better monitoring".

A joint lobbying effort by American Express Co, Mastercard Inc and Visa Inc to dilute or reverse the directive has failed to shift the central bank's position, with the RBI telling the firms in a meeting this month to comply, not complain, sources with direct knowledge told Reuters.

The RBI declined to comment, but a government source with direct knowledge confirmed the central bank was "unlikely to back down on its plans".

INVESTMENT PLANS

The card companies are nervous that the move will disrupt their investment plans, as millions of dollars are diverted from other projects in a scramble to open local data centres within six months. "There is a feeling of helplessness and we will have to comply," said a source with direct knowledge of the meetings.

The RBI's insistence that payments data be stored "only in India" would hamper global fraud detection and the companies should be allowed to keep a back-up, the sources said.

The government source disagreed. "The suggestion that you need a disaster management back-up centre overseas just does not cut it," said the source, who declined to be identified. "This is not a small island nation that would get entirely crippled by a single natural disaster."

Mastercard said it was working with the industry to engage the RBI "to understand their need for access to domestic data and work towards a solution that meets the regulatory requirements" in line with global norms.

Visa declined to comment, while American Express did not respond to a request for comment.

The move would not impact local players such as Softbank Group-backed Indian digital payments firm Paytm, as well as homegrown card payment network RuPay, which competes with the likes of Visa and Mastercard, as they already store their data in India.

ONLY IN INDIA
The industry says India's proposed data storage rules would be among the world's most restrictive. China also tightened cyber regulation in the past year, formalising new rules that require firms to store data locally. None of the global payment card companies, however, operate in the Chinese domestic market yet. Countries such as Russia and Indonesia also have an onshore data storage requirement, but they do not restrict companies from transfer of transactions data offshore as well, according to lobby group U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC), which counts the three U.S. card companies among its members.

Global payment firms currently store and process Indian transactions outside the country and a major concern to the industry is a clause in the RBI's order that asks for data to be stored "only in India", two sources said. That, according to the industry, would restrict the transfer of data needed to effectively detect and analyse global fraud patterns, and make India more vulnerable to financial crime. In a letter dated May 3, seen by Reuters, the USIBC pressed the RBI for a "reversal or an indefinite stay" of its directive, which it said would make India's payments ecosystem more prone to cyber-attacks. It also urged the RBI to remove any restriction on transferring the data outside India and specify the time period for which the data needed to be stored locally.

An industry executive at a U.S. payments firm said while the RBI was likely to soon issue clarifications to address some of their concerns, but it would not change the notification's implementation date. In an earnings call last month, Visa CEO Alfred Kelly Jr. referred to the RBI's six-month deadline as a "tough timeframe".

The directive comes as more people in India are switching to plastic money, partly driven by the Modi's decision to replace high-value currency notes in November 2016, since when the government has aggressively discouraged cash transactions. In March, Indians clocked transactions worth $52 billion using their 900 million credit and debit cards, nearly double the amount recorded in November 2016, data from the RBI showed.

But fraud is a concern too. The RBI recorded 57,411 cases of card fraud totalling $43 million in the three years to December 2017, according to a Right to Information response seen by Reuters.

The RBI in April said the payment ecosystem in India had "expanded considerably", making it necessary to ensure "the safety and security" of data.
India resists lobbying by US payment firms to ease local data storage rules

Look at the excuses the card companies are making. What they really want is the data on our spending patterns.
 
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We should do the same for whatsapp, FB and Google. I have over 2-3 times have seen notifications in google that someone has accessed my account from Chicago, LA in times when I did not have even passport. (PDF effect maybe :P ) .

Indian agencies shouldnt be afraid. If required we should ban companies till the time they effect the change in rules. Maybe it will help grow local companies. Right now local police cyber cell cant take any action reported on FB, twitter etc. Takes lots of time.
And GoI should promote RuPay. Visa, MC and American Express should store data or GTFO.
 
Move over, Mastercard, Visa: India’s UPI now almost half the value of debit, credit card swipes
Global card companies like Visa Inc. and Mastercard Inc. are losing market share to upstarts in the world’s most innovative payments market: India.

Transactions through India’s homegrown Unified Payments Interface — which allows mobile apps run by retailers, airlines and other firms to take payment directly from bank accounts — reached almost half the value of debit and credit cards swiped at stores last month, central bank data show.

The surge in UPI transactions has taken place since 2016 when the interface was set up by an umbrella organization of Indian banks. Mastercard, in contrast, has built up its business in India over three decades.

“The introduction of UPI in August 2016 led to the creation of a wealth of new innovative payment solutions, and the adoption rates of UPI payments are truly spectacular,” U.S.-based Fidelity National Information Services Inc. said in a December 2017 report. UPI “opens up access to real-time by allowing payments to be directly integrated into external business applications,” it said.

India’s payments system was alone among more than 40 countries tracked by Fidelity National to gain a top score of five for innovation and customer value. China’s Internet Banking Payment System scored two and Kenya’s PesaLink scored four. Criteria included round-the-clock availability, speed of settlement, and level of government or regulator support.

Amazon.com Inc. and Jet Airways India Ltd. — the nation’s second-biggest airline by passengers — are among firms that have integrated UPI into their apps in order to take payment from customers. Ola, a local rival to Uber Technologies Inc., Big Bazaar, a chain of stores run by billionaire Kishore Biyani, and incumbent mobile wallet leader Paytm Mobile Solutions Pvt. are other users.

Facebook Inc. is piloting a payments service in India with a UPI backbone for its WhatsApp Pay, which has already drawn comparisons with the way WeChat reshaped payments in China.

upi-cards-bloomberg-2.png


“Payment integration into popular apps in India will drive the digital payments market to $1 trillion over the next five years,” Credit Suisse Group AG said in a report last month. “With 800 million bank accounts now linked, the bulk is mobile-transaction ready.”

Currently, India’s payments market is worth less than $200 billion, dwarfed by China’s $27 trillion market that’s now opening up to global players.

One challenge in India is the dominance of cash, which accounts for some 70 percent of the country’s total transactions by value. However, China transitioned to digital on the back of rising mobile and data penetration, and that process was hastened by e-commerce and social platforms, according to Credit Suisse. The same shift may play out in India, where data usage for 300 million Indian smartphone users rose to 5-10 GB a month from 1GB last year.

upi-cards-bloomberg-1.png


Advances in India’s digital payments market picked up pace after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s shock decision to invalidate 86 percent of the country’s currency in circulation. The number of UPI transactions have surged almost 57,000 percent since November 2016, while that of debit and credit cards has risen 20 percent.

“While the effects of the demonetization event of November 2016 are now waning, it would be safe to conclude that the event has caused a permanent uplift in the share of non-cash transactions in the economy,” said Credit Suisse.
Move over, Mastercard, Visa: India’s UPI now almost half the value of debit, credit card swipes
 
Google Pay: Google Pay to bring UPI capability in Gmail, apps

MUMBAI:Google is saying goodbye to Tez — the country’s account-to-account payment platform. The tech giant had launched the brand a year ago to enable transactions using UPI.

The India-specific app will now be repositioned as Google Pay — its global payments product. By bringing UPI capability under Google Pay, the Mountain View, California-headquartered company will allow users in India to send money within emails, and make purchases in its online Play Store.


Speaking to TOI, Google VP (product management) and head of Next Billion Users initiative and payments, Caesar Sengupta, said the repositioning will help the company to offer UPI functionality across all Google apps. “We feel that payment is a core functionality the way email or storage is, which come with every google account. In some countries we have a feature in Gmail where you can send money. Those are examples of some of the features we are looking at bringing to Google Pay users in India,” said Sengupta.


On Monday Google said that users of adsense — its advertising platform — could transact using UPI. It also announced a feature whereby four lenders — ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, Kotak Bank and Federal Bank — will offer instant loans to their customers on Google Pay. The company has also partnered Pine Labs, an aggregator that provides credit card-acceptance services to retail chains like Big Bazaar, to accept payments via Google Pay in offline stores.


The Google Pay experience here, however, will be different. In other countries, the app works as an e-wallet that allows customers to store their card details and use their mobile phone’s near-field communication (NFC) capability for making contactless payments. In India, Tez was not registered as an e-wallet but as a UPI service provider. Since Tez was launched, UPI transactions have grown fourteenfold from 17 million transactions a month — with Google being one of the main drivers. Transactions soared on the back of ‘scratch cards’ that enabled users win cash rewards.


Sengupta said, “We are working on bringing other features, including NFC, to India. But there were a number of issues including technology, service integration, product testing and approvals,” he said. In India, a mobile payment service, Samsung Pay, already has tokenisation capability. This allows contactless payments to be made in shops without sharing card details. However, the RBI
has not given a blanket approval to payment service providers for deploying this capability.
 
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U.S. Credit Card Giants Flout India’s New Law on Personal Data
Image
merlin_142036800_062fe7e9-ad14-4bbc-92dd-9e2afc9da25c-articleLarge.jpg

Visa, Mastercard and American Express will be violating a new Indian law that is going into effect on Monday night every time an Indian swipes a credit or debit card.CreditCreditPhilippe Wojazer/Reuters
By Vindu Goel
  • Oct. 15, 2018
MUMBAI, India — When the clock struck midnight in Delhi at the end of Monday, Visa, Mastercard and American Express were suddenly in violation of the law every time an Indian swiped a credit or debit card.
They also became unwilling warriors in a budding conflict between America’s technology giants and the Indian government, which wants more control over the data they collect on India’s 1.3 billion residents.
The spark for the current fight is a new regulation, issued in April and in effect starting Tuesday, that requires payments companies to store all information about transactions involving Indians solely on computers in the country. The rule and the hubbub over it are part of a debate over a concept known as “data localization,” in which a country places restrictions on data as a way to gain better control over it and potentially curb the power of international companies. American firms have lobbied hard against data localization rules around the world.
In India, Visa, Mastercard and American Express, as well as other financial players like Amazon and PayPal, said they needed more time to comply with the order by the country’s banking regulator, the Reserve Bank of India.

The companies told the R.B.I. that their fraud detection and other data processing systems were distributed on machines across the world and could not be quickly redesigned to work in India alone. As an alternative, they offered to store copies of the Indian data in the country for easy access by regulators, tax authorities and law enforcement.
But the R.B.I. would have none of it. In recent phone calls to the top Indian executives of the major payments companies and in letters to the companies last week, the banking regulator warned that it would take action, including imposing fines, if they missed the Monday night deadline.
Mukesh Aghi, the chief executive of the U.S.-India Strategic Partnership Forum, said the payments companies were frustrated with the regulators. “They refuse to sit down and have a discussion,” said Dr. Aghi, whose policy group counts the head of Mastercard on its board.
Spokesmen for Visa and American Express declined to comment on their response to the local storage rule. Representatives of Mastercard and the R.B.I. did not respond to multiple requests for comment.


Amazon, which operates an India-only payments service that uses elements of its global technology platform, said in a statement: “Compliance with local laws and regulation is a top priority for us in all the countries we operate in. We continue to work closely with the regulator towards this.”
The R.B.I., an agency akin to the Federal Reserve in the United States, has said little about why it decided that Indian financial data must be stored only in India. In its April order, it said, “In order to ensure better monitoring, it is important to have unfettered supervisory access to data stored with these system providers.”
Its policy changed as other arms of the Indian government — spurred by both a privacy ruling from the Supreme Court and India-first nationalists in the governing Bharatiya Janata Party — had begun deliberating over much bigger changes to the country’s data, e-commerce and privacy laws.
Those broader proposals, which are unlikely to be passed until after India’s national elections in May, are intended to curb the ability of American tech titans to collect, analyze and make money from data they collect inside the country, which is the world’s fastest-growing market for new internet users. The rules would also give a leg up to domestic firms like Reliance Jio, a leading telecom provider, and Paytm, a payments company, which are seeking government help as they try to compete with the likes of Google, Facebook, Amazon and Mastercard.
India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, has portrayed himself abroad as a pro-business leader who welcomes foreign investment. At the same time, the right wing of his party has pushed him to adopt more protectionist, India-first policies to appeal to voters, and law enforcement officials have urged him to make sure they can easily get data on residents when they need it.
The Trump administration and the bipartisan India caucus of the United States Senate have both urged India to reconsider its data localization campaign, in part because India’s own outsourcing companies depend on moving data across borders to offer their services.
On Friday, the co-chairmen of the India caucus, Senators John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, and Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia, wrote to Mr. Modi warning that data localization “will have negative impacts on the ability of companies to do business in India, may undermine your own economic goals and will likely not improve the security of Indian citizens’ data.”
The same day, Dennis Shea, a deputy United States trade representative and the ambassador to the World Trade Organization, told a Washington audience, “We want to have prohibitions on data localization, disciplines to ensure this free flow of data across borders.”
Dr. Aghi, who has helped American financial firms press their case with the Indian government, said top executives of the big payments companies were summoned to a meeting on Wednesday with B. P. Kanungo, who oversees regulation of payments at the R.B.I.
At that meeting, the payments companies asked for 12 more months to fully localize Indian financial data. But R.B.I. officials insisted that the companies meet the Monday night deadline.
In a follow-up letter to India’s finance minister, Arun Jaitley, Dr. Aghi said the R.B.I. had improperly suggested that the foreign financial firms seek assistance from iSpirt, a technology think tank in Bangalore with close ties to the government and Indian financial-services players.
The only major American company that said it was ready to comply by midnight was Facebook’s WhatsApp messaging service. WhatsApp has been testing an India-only payments service but has yet to receive government approval to offer it to all 250 million of its Indian users.


U.S. Credit Card Giants Flout India’s New Law on Personal Data
 
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Mastercard to start deleting data of Indian cardholders from global servers
Global card payments major Mastercard has proposed to the Reserve Bank a "certain" date from which it will start deleting data of Indian cardholders from global servers but warned that it would also mean weakening of "safety and security" over a period of time.

In an interaction with PTI, Porush Singh, India and Division President, South Asia, MasterCard, said the company is operating in over 200 countries, and nowhere else it has been asked to delete data from global servers.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in April issued a new regulation, which came into effect from October 16, requiring payments companies to store all information about transactions involving Indians solely on computers in the country.

Mastercard said all new Indian transaction data is being stored at its technology centre in Pune as of October 6, as required by the RBI directive on data localisation.

It has given a proposal to the RBI to delete back data from certain date but is wary of consequences of such a move, including disputes over transactions.

"The proposal we have given (to RBI) is that we will delete it (data) from everywhere else, whether it is the card number, transaction details. The data will only be stored in India ... we will start deleting that...," Singh said.

He further said Mastercard has proposed to the RBI that Indian data would be be stored locally and nowhere else.

The senior Mastercard official, however, added that the company has also informed the central bank about the impact of data deletion.

"But we have also said that it does have an impact. No other country has asked us like that.

"No other country in the world has asked us the data to be deleted from the global server and the reason why it is a concern for us because that would be weakening of the safety, security over a period of time," Singh said.

On if the company is seeking any reprieve in complying with the regulations, Singh said the company is planning with the dateline which it has submitted to the RBI.

"I do not want to wait. As far as we are concerned, we have said this is the date earliest we can do... And this is going to be impact in the longer term which you need to consider," he added.

When asked if the payments gateway was complying with the RBI directives, Singh said from October Mastercard has started storing a copy of the data."...the date of (data) deletion (from global servers) is something which is not yet decided as we are waiting for the RBI to confirm back to us," he said and added "we have proposed a certain date on which we will start deleting the data on a running/regular basis".

Singh further said deletion of data is not a simple process like "pressing a button".

"This is because people can charge you...dispute the transactions, that all in process ... it needs multiple players, multiple stakeholders. We have given them (RBI) a proposal and we are waiting for them to confirm back," he said.

When asked what would be the cost of data localisation, Singh said there will be "incremental cost".

Data localisation requires data about residents be collected, processed, and stored inside the country, often before being transferred internationally, and usually transferred only after meeting local privacy or data protection laws.
Mastercard to start deleting data of Indian cardholders from global servers
 
Soundwave technology: The new frontier in digital payment space
On November 8, 2016, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the scrapping of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes in a revolutionary attempt to combat the issues of black money, corruption, and the outflow of money funding illegal activities and terrorism. Following the demonetisation drive, the Indian government has been working relentlessly to promote the usage of digital payment solutions.

With a phenomenal rise in the ownership of smartphones and introduction of easy-to-use payment methods like BHIM UPI and Aadhaar-linked payments, India has already ventured into its journey towards becoming a cashless economy. According to the statistics provided by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), as many as 523.23 million cashless transactions worth Rs 93.63 lakh took place in November 2016 itself. Furthermore, the country has witnessed a robust rise in the number of debit and credit card holders over the last couple of years. From individuals to businesses, the adoption of digital payment methods has been extensive. However, in a country like India where cash still remains a preferred mode of payment for a majority of its citizens, there still are some major hurdles ahead.

To begin with, digital payment solutions are largely designed for smartphones, and the smartphone penetration in India is just 24%, according to a global survey conducted by The Pew Research Center. Moreover, only a fraction of smartphone holders in the country are well-acquainted with technologies such as RFID, Infrared, Bluetooth and NFC.

Moreover, upon taking into consideration factors like poor network coverage, low disposable income, and lack of cognisance, a smartphone’s usage often gets limited to making calls and sending messages only. While UPI is compatible with feature phones, the percentage of transactions made through them is negligible. A robust solution is needed to bring about a transformation in the digital payment ecosystem at a more granular level.

Soundwave technology: The force to reckon with in the digital payment ecosystem
Prior to the implementation of demonetisation, cash was the most widely used payment method in India. The reason for cash being the king for Indian consumers is simple; ease of availability and simplicity of usage.
Universally accessible, there is no requirement for a ground-level infrastructure to use cash. On the other hand, mobile and online payments typically require a digital device enabled with internet and NFC. Further, most digital payment methods involve a two-factor authentication, i.e. pin and OTP, thereby making the entire process seem somewhat puzzling and complicated to many.

Additionally, people from Tier II and Tier III cities generally prefer using cash over the digital methods due to lack of digital literacy.

However, with the 4th Industrial Revolution dawning upon us, where modern technologies are blurring the lines between the physical, digital and biological spheres, things are looking up for companies in the digital payments sector as well. Soundwave technology, for example, is one such development that is addressing these challenges head-on.

This technology facilitates a universally scalable and cost-effective means of payment by leveraging the benefits of cash-based and digital payment methods. The USP of soundwave-based payment systems lies its simplicity and convenience.

It enables transactions on smart as well as feature phone. Makes the transaction faster, seamless in smart phone and also enable feature phone users to do transaction without internet dependency. In addition to all of this, soundwave-based payments are entirely secure, which can be a relief amidst the rising incidents of cyber frauds and security. Relatively inexpensive to deploy, soundwave technology holds the potential to create major transformational disruptions in the digital payment space.

As more and more people turn to mobile wallets and UPI-based payment apps, the government’s dream of making India a major cashless economy may soon turn into a reality. And, with 668.3 million users projected to rely on Soundwave technology by 2021, usage of cash as a mode of payment could possibly become rare in near future, if not obsolete.
Soundwave technology: The new frontier in digital payment space
 
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Canara Bank becomes the first public sector bank in India to meet RBI’s EMV mandate
ACI Worldwide, a global provider of realtime electronic payment and banking solutions, announced that Canara Bank has successfully rolled out major new functionality to support EMV card acquiring across its ATM network and Aadhaar Authentication, leveraging ACI’s UP Retail Payments solution to achieve market firsts.

Canara Bank, one of India’s largest public sector banks with nearly 6,300 branches and a network of more than 10,000 ATMs, is the first public sector bank to shift to EMV chip and PIN for card present transactions across the country’s vast ATM network. The EMV shift, as in other major global markets, is aimed at reducing lost and stolen card fraud and making counterfeit card fraud more difficult. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had set a deadline of December 31, 2018 for the switch, mandating use of an embedded chip to replace the traditional magnetic stripe card.

The bank has tapped into the extensive functionality of ACI’s UP Retail Payments solution, which they have been relying upon as their core payments processing engine for 12 years, to be the first public sector bank in India to meet RBI’s EMV mandate. This is a major achievement for the bank as it offers its retail banking customers improved authentication for card-present transactions at the ATM, thus ensuring even greater security and risk mitigation. In addition, functionality developed by ACI and Canara Bank also speeds up the process of Aadhaar number linking, which eases KYC compliance at the bank’s branches.

“ACI has played a central role in driving EMV rollouts across numerous countries over the years. That, coupled with our long and extensive footprint within India, enables us to effectively drive key initiatives for innovative banks like Canara Bank, a long-time ACI customer,” said Kaushik Roy, Vice President – South Asia, ACI Worldwide. “Canara Bank’s successful rollout of EMV acquiring across its ATM network, and its implementation of biometric ID based on the 12-digit Aadhaar number, demonstrates that even the largest public sector companies can adopt a more agile approach and benefit from working with vendors such as ACI, which offer flexible, scalable payments technology.”
Canara Bank becomes the first public sector bank in India to meet RBI’s EMV mandate
 
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India Enterprise Architecture: What is it and should it be made mandatory for all e-governance projects?

With IndEA there will be one personalised account for each individual and he or she can avail all government services from it

Sameer Sachdeva, May 24, 2019 17:23:13 IST

The Central government appears to have taken a leaf out of the Andhra Pradesh government’s book on the e-pragiti project and is planning to implement the India Enterprise Architecture (IndEA), a concept that promises a single window digitisation solution for its citizens.

The National e-Governance Division, under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), has come up with a request for empanelment for organisations that are consulting for Digital India Programme, including India Enterprise Architecture, and will come into force after a new government comes to power at the Centre.

IndEA in common man’s language

IndEA seeks to simplify an aam aadmi’s life. An individual can book a ticket on the IRCTC website, check the status of voter’s card on the Election Commission of India website, register a company on the MCA21 portal, book an appointment for passport on the Passport Seva website, check the status of Aadhaar card on the UIDAI portal etc. Clearly, the offline queues will shift to online.

With IndEA there will be one personalised account for each individual and he or she can avail all government services from that personalised account. You would no longer have to visit separate sites and have separate logins on them to access government services. And, various e-queues will become a passé after the country adopts IndEA.

Andhra Pradesh govt’s e-Pragati project

Andhra Pradesh’s e-pragati project treats the state as an enterprise-of-enterprises. It is in the process of linking as many as 33 departments and 315 government agencies and aims to provide around 745 e-services to the people.


Technical Architecture of Andhra Pradesh’s government’s e-Pragati project

J. Satyanaryana, chairperson, UIDAI, and also the IT advisor to the Andhra Pradesh government says, “We have created a core e-platform. Currently, applications are being developed for education youth services and sports departments. App store and the portal will be up and running soon.”

Need for IndEA

The need for nationwide enterprise architecture is felt because e-governance projects are standalone initiatives and rarely holistic. They don’t conform to standards as defined by the government but are an automated result of the existing processes. Even if new systems are built the legacy systems continue, leading to a mismatch in delivery of services. Besides, many existing systems are vendor-driven and they seldom interact with others.

IndEA provides a generic framework, comprising a set of architecture reference models, which can be converted into an integrated architecture, including ministries, states, government agencies etc. IndEA will be based on a federal architecture that will accommodate both greenfield (new) and brownfield (existing/legacy) e-governance initiatives. The framework consists of eight reference models such as Business, Application, Data, Technology, Performance, Security, Integration and Architecture Governance.

Dr Lovneesh Chanana, vice-president, Digital Government (Asia Pacific and Japan), SAP, says, “So far, the siloes for development and deployment have been the hallmark of our e-governance programme management, but IndEA can help achieve a seamless experience for a citizen.”

Paradigm of ONE Government

IndEA answers all of Dr Chanana questions as it is about a single e-entity for a citizen. IndEA’s vision is “to establish best-in-class architectural governance, processes and practices with optimal utilisation of ICT infrastructure and applications to offer ONE Government experience to the citizens and businesses”.

Satyanarayana, who is also the chairman of the government committee on Enterprise Architecture, explains the concept of one government, “Most of the services will be available on mobile (m-services) that are on the go. There will be a single app store or portal for all citizen services. Personalisation will also become possible. Certain concepts will eliminate the need for unnecessary documentation. IndEA’s interoperability will also vastly reduce the unproductive work for both the government and the people.”

Replication of projects

However, question mark lingers over the implementation of e-governance initiatives. Now, each state and government department are developing their own applications, leading to a lot of duplication of work. But, adoption of IndEA could lead to the evolution of centralised applications.

“The ease of replication will also address the requirement of horizontal transfer to avoid reinventing the wheel every time,” says Dr Chanana. The same sentiment is echoed by Satyanaryana.

Advantage of IndEA

Deepak Maheshwari, director, government affairs, Symantec, (India, ASEAN & China), puts IndEA in the economic context. “The government can work as a single enterprise, enhancing its technical and economic efficiencies. IndEA can significantly bridge gaps in institutional capacities besides acting as a common benchmark.”

Similar thoughts are echoed by Jaijit Bhattacharya, CEO & founder at Zerone Microsystems, “IndEA is a much-needed Government Enterprise Architecture, which will not only reduce the cost of building systems but will also ensure that they are better integrated and also increase the longevity of e-governance software assets.”

Dr Chanana agrees with Bhattacharya. “A unified government agenda is the need of the hour as it would improve the citizen’s participation and lay the foundation for emerging technologies like artificial intelligence. “

IndEA: Architecture of Architectures

Dr Pallab Saha, chief architect, The Open Group & President, Association of Enterprise Architects (India), weighs in on the e-concept. “The enterprise architecture’s role is pivotal to transformation as IndEA aims to become the core of Digital India Version 2.0.”

IndEA: An evolving process

The industry harbours a contrarian view of IndEA and wants it to evolve over a period of time. Maheshwari says, “Change must be constant as far as policies, technologies and user behaviour are concerned.”

The industry appears divided over whether the Enterprise Architecture should be made mandatory.

Bhattacharya says, “A wider adoption of IndEA remains its biggest challenge as similar initiatives in the past such as Open Standards initiative of MeitY have been thwarted. We may get desired benefits if IndEA is mandated at all levels of government.”

But, Maheshwari disagrees. He says, “It may not be pragmatic to impose the framework mandatorily across the board as systems evolve differently. For instance. If credible data is available, it would catch like a wildfire as people would appreciate its inherent value.”

The adoption of Enterprise Architecture has been explored by many countries, but it may take a decade to evolve.

So far, international success stories or benchmarks are few and far between. But, India is marching along with other developed nations in implementing the Enterprise Architecture to deliver public good.

India Enterprise Architecture: What is it and should it be made mandatory for all e-governance projects?- Technology News, Firstpost