Open Banking raises fraud liability concerns
Banks and third-party providers may suffer from ambiguity in fraud accountability, according to members of the Open Banking scheme. Rachel Gentry, information ... read more
Banks and third-party providers may suffer from ambiguity in fraud accountability, according to members of the Open Banking scheme. Rachel Gentry, information ... read more
Alison Donnelly sat down with PaymentEye to discuss diversity and inclusion in payments, the power of regulation to change the industry for the better, and the influence of consumer demands on the world of b2b payments.
Ralf Ohlhausen, Business Development Director, PPRO at Money 20/20 EU, Amsterdam, discusses the rise of local and alternative payment methods and the evolution of PSD2.
Treasurers are increasingly using commercial cards to create a central payments solution, says David Voss, head of commercial cards for EMEA, Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
How can financial services effectively and innovatively leverage consumer data to provide solutions beyond the merely convenient to create something truly revolutionary?
This is a sea change for Open Banking and a new era in the way money is moved – opening up payment infrastructure for banks and linking third-party partners. By Dr. Rachel Gauci, Senior Legal Counsel at Credorax.
In this new era, banks are required to provide other third parties such as qualified payment service providers (PSPs) connectivity to access customer account data and to initiate payments.
Data privacy has recently come to occupy the mainstream and public imagination. But it has been a headache for many years in the financial services with executives scratching their heads over how to get their organisations ready for May 25.
When Tom Blomfield, CEO of Monzo, told bobsguide “If we do our job right, we’ll make some of the high street banks extinct”, it sounded like a gutsy gauntlet to throw. Originally published on bobsguide.
By, Emilie Casteran, Head of Digital Strategy, Banking & Payments at Gemalto.