Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Open Source Programming The Almighty Buck United Kingdom

How an Open Standard API Could Revolutionize Banking 72

An anonymous reader writes: Open bank data will give us the freedom to access all banks in real time and from a single view, automatically calculating the best deals in complete transparency, which will be a significant step forward for social good and give people more control over their finances. Meanwhile, financial tech incubators, accelerators, and startups are creating a more experienced talent pool of developers ready to act upon these newly available assets. From the article: "The United Kingdom government has commissioned a study of the feasibility of UK banks giving customers the ability to share their transactional data with third parties via an open standard API. First mentioned alongside the autumn statement back in December, the chancellor has now outlined plans for a mandatory open banking API standard during the recent budget in March."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

How an Open Standard API Could Revolutionize Banking

Comments Filter:
  • LMAO (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Friday May 01, 2015 @05:40AM (#49591965)

    Does the author serious thinks banks are going to adopt anything that is "a significant step forward for social good and give people more control over their finances". Most of the money they make is off people who can't control their finances effectively.

    Keep in mind their entire business is moving numbers from one pile to another. Anything that keeps them in control of the access to these piles and information about them is a good thing to them.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      the chancellor has now outlined plans for a mandatory open banking API standard during the recent budget in March.

      I presume you know what "mandatory" means?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Yes. It means the little folks have to do it and the big corporations and their rich CEOs/paid off politicians can ignore them.

      • by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Friday May 01, 2015 @06:00AM (#49592013)
        I presume you know that "mandatory" doesn't mean anything* when bankers of any ilk are involved?

        *Actually, it means "tell me the rules, so I can get around them".
      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        the chancellor has now outlined plans for a mandatory open banking API standard during the recent budget in March.

        I presume you know what "mandatory" means?

        I presume you know what "plan" means?

        • by Meneth ( 872868 )

          I presume you know what "plan" means?

          Well, what you plan and what takes place ain't ever exactly been similar. ;)

      • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

        the chancellor has now outlined plans for a mandatory open banking API standard during the recent budget in March.

        I presume you know what "mandatory" means?

        The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:LMAO (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 01, 2015 @08:02AM (#49592249)

      Actually the UK government has forced banks to do things for the good of the customer many times.

      A similar example would be the "faster payments" system. It used to take about three days to make transfers between accounts, the government (well, regulator, but same thing really) told all of the banks in the UK to sort it out.We can now transfer money between accounts in less than 90mins, typically it's moved as fast as you can logon to another bank and check to see if it's there.

      Other examples include making it easier to move accounts by moving DirectDebits (a system to allow bills to be paid directly electronically from bank accounts, without cheques) between different banks, which never used to be possible.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      This will never happen. We can't even agree on a document standard, and mostly because companies prefer the lock-in vector to keep customers at their doors. Anything that makes your service more fungible is always going to be shunned. It's good to have choice as a customer, but it's bad for a vendor.

      We've been playing this cat-n-mouse game for a long time now. You can't win this.

    • by rizole ( 666389 )
      I can pay for good and services with my debit card. I can also make withdrawls and get cash back from 3rd parties. I can even withdraw money from competing banks cash points but I can't go into a different bank and pay money into an account with my debit card. The reason I can't do this is competition between banks (the kind lady behind the counter told me confidentially). This is not a technical problem. What I want to be able to do with my money is not my banks priority.
  • Best deals? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by abies ( 607076 ) on Friday May 01, 2015 @05:53AM (#49591985)

    I can understand benefits of standard, open API for automatic processing of orders for companies and various home-budget tools. But I don't get "automatically calculating the best deals in complete transparency". Do you really need a program, querying 100 of banks in realtime for the best place to have your current account _today_? And tomorrow you are going to switch, because international transfers over there are half cent cheaper?
    API for transactions - sure yes. But API for bank offers metadata? Isn't it bit too much?

    • by gnupun ( 752725 )

      It's likely one API for UK government to access/store bank transaction data about its citizens (big brother). Having one API for multiple banks appears useless for customers.

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        Without commenting on your Government usage assumptions, if there's a single API that works with all UK banks then it becomes far easier to develop banking software designed for consumer use, and for consumers to switch bank accounts without having to change everything.

    • Before the most recent crash, the financial sector of the US economy represented 40% of GDP one year (and I doubt the UK was too far off from that). Clearly a ridiculous figure. While most of that was probably fees on stock trading and the like, some part of that was consumer financial services.

      And besides, banks are a good place to start to modernize because they're already heavily regulated so consumers have more of a chance of pushing what's good for us. But once we prove the possibility and utility of d

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday May 01, 2015 @06:05AM (#49592021)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      They will love it, because what they want is transparency and more competition, because that is what banks want: to give you the ability to compare.

      Oh wait, they don't. They will fight this with everything they have and they have money.

      Despite the paranoid occutard ring to it, this guy is right.

      Here is what will happen:

      Banks that think they can compete on both customer service and rates will do this. ("Rates" here is a generic term for "differences in fees, rates, periods, and interest that might cause a consumer to switch".) Because they can scoop up a wide variety of the people looking at that stuff.

      The rest of them, the ones that compete on location, pain-in-the-ass factor, cute tellers, ATM networks, etc. who really don't have m

      • by Anonymous Coward
        This is why we need Elizabeth Warren to run for president.
    • Correct, they have their money AND ours. The only way to level the playing field is to nationalize the banks, END the FED, disassociate from the IMF and the World bank, and limit loan interest. GO BRICS!
  • 1. Customer opt in or opt out? Binary control, or more fine grained control?
    2. Security? Liability?
    3. Will the "financial tech incubators, accelerators, and startups" be held to the same requirements and same standards? If not, why not?
    4. How will API evolution and versioning work? Who's responsible?
    5. How will compliance with the standard(s) (and service levels) be enforced?
  • by queazocotal ( 915608 ) on Friday May 01, 2015 @06:08AM (#49592031)

    Imagine that instead of having your shitty bank app or website, or in many cases, several shitty bank apps or websites, you had one unified app that accessed that consistent API across banks, and presented a nice interface.

    Transfer from bank 1s savings account on the right day to pay your incoming card bill from bank 2. ...
    Unified balance and tracking of upcoming bills - warning you if you're about to go into the red with a hypothetical purchase in a week and your forecast income, ...

    And yes - security is an obvious issue, and there need to be strict permissions.

    • Currently most non-routine transfers in the UK for personal accounts are authorised by 2FA - you get a PIN terminal, you stick your debit card in the slot, and it interfaces with a challenge-response app on the smartcard in your plastic.

      I hope they keep that air gap in there. There's potential to use the NFC loop in your phone to cut the separate device out of the loop, but that would mean your phone might be running malware that takes the opportunity to run some other transactions. Better to have a simple

    • Imagine that instead of having your .... several shitty bank apps or websites, you had one unified app that .... presented a nice interface.

      Why do you assume that the unified interface will be nice? I have accounts at several [UK] banks; the Nationwide interface is good but the FirstDirect interface is bad. For example, to view up-coming payments with FirstDirect is a job of work - I think they want you to over-draw so they can charge you for it. As another example the Nationwide show your statement in what I would call correct chronological order - oldest at the top. Most banks however have latest at the top; and some (only some) of those

      • I apologise for being unclear.
        I was assuming that the API was sufficient to allow banking apps to do this.
        So, for example, both existing banks apps could support other banks, and new providers, or open-source apps could be used.
        In other words - a choice rather than 'pick bank, get app'.

  • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Friday May 01, 2015 @08:06AM (#49592259)

    Through a self-perpetuating ecosystem of developers, the banks will continue to gather high-value data from customers through third party integration.

    I read the article but don't really understand what a "self-perpetuating ecosystem of developers" would do for me. It sounds like they're planning to breed.

    • It sounds like they're planning to breed.

      Developers don't breed. We spawn. And we swim in schools, preferring oceans of Mountain Dew.

  • Hmm, all banks with a common API so any flaw in that API means that the cybercriminals have instant access to all banking information for everyone everywhere. And we know d*mned well that there WILL be flaws in that API.

    I prefer the bazaar to the cathedral, please.

  • How about proper support for OFX first? I have enough issues with my bank sending me broken OFX Files that are broken, or that every OFX Client for Linux remotely supports.

  • This is just a superficial technology implementation that will make the BIG banks richer, more powerful, and better organized, financially and politically. Not a revolution at all. It's a step backwards for humanity. A REVOLUTION would to be breaking up the BIG banks into much smaller and better regulated entities that cannot use depositors money for risk-implied investments, i.e. Wall $treet.
  • Bitcoin is the open, decentralized and open-source banking API.

    Despite what you may have heard, the technology is thriving and the number of developers, projects and startups in the space is exploding. 2015 is on track to be a $1b investment year for bitcoin, most invested in USD (not bitcoin) in more than 700 startups.

    It's a lot more than a currency, it's the Internet of Money, or Money-over-IP (MOIP). Read the Satoshi Nakamoto whitepaper, every geek should.

  • Other posters have already demolished the idea that banks will do this voluntarily or by edict.

    The engineering approach is to not involve them. The Finance::Bank [cpan.org] collection is the closest you're going to find to a workable solution.

    Anybody who has money to spend on a government "solution" should send it to these developers instead.

  • while the UK has their issues, this issue is all but settled in the US. the Open Financial Exchange [wikipedia.org] defines a way to interface with banks. the problem is getting software that can do this with ease.

Lots of folks confuse bad management with destiny. -- Frank Hubbard

Working...