Citigroup Plans Thumbprint ATMs For India's Poor 123
Brad Lucier points out
a Financial Times report (carried by MSN Money) that Citigroup is rolling out a network of biometric ATMs aimed at illiterate Indian slum dwellers. From the article: "The machines will recognize account holders' thumbprints, eliminating the need for a personal identification number, and will have color-coded screen instructions and voiceovers to help guide them through transactions... Though India's population exceeds 1 billion, Citigroup estimates that there are only about 300 million bank accounts in the country... 'It's not a philanthropic exercise,' [PS Jayakumar, a Citigroup business manager in India] said. 'For it to be sustainable, we should break even and make a little bit of money.'"
Hm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hm (Score:5, Funny)
Meanwhile, illegal thumb drives are still the domain of the Chinese.
Greedy bastards (Score:2)
In other words, "We want to make a profit off the very poorest of the poor. No one is safe from our greed."
It's as bad as the current round of "profit records" by Canada's banks. Now that they've paid off their Enron bills by hiking service fees, their profits are leaping to insane levels on the backs of people who can't afford it and who have no choice. Now that
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Cite? Documentation of a single such case would be a good start... which should be very easy to do since it happens "routinely."
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http://www.justfuckinggoogleit.com/search.pl?quer
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India is a country that constantly defies western classifications.But, of course, whenever an article on India is put up on slashdot, every closet racist troll has to express himself by generating a
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> a stereotype.
I'm not sure you can define describing a fact as `generating a stereotype`. It was relevant to the discussion. America has made some progress since lynch mobs murdered innocent people because of the colour of their skin in the last half century or so, but it would still be relevant to mention that fact in a discussion regarding racism. Or would that also b
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What you say about about Bush and `backward hicks` could be seen as a generalisation if taken out of context, but would also be relevant to certain discussions - for example if one was comparing US voters now with those of the past.
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You're describing it as a characterization. I'm describing it as a statement of fact. If it's raining, you don't say "It's raining locally, but of course it's not necessarily raining in other parts of the country, some of which are enjoying sunshine", as it's not relevant to any decisions made about umbrella deployment.
> Your statement was categorical, not qualified, and, I suspect, m
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Thumb print biometrics is for better or worse nothing more nor less than a password that never changes. All that will be needed to steal it it to cause someone to get their thumb print or finger prints read once, like offering a cheap toy or a prize if you sign on with your thumb print. Then either a fake thumb or a code signal intercept will be done and instantly Identity theft will hit a new stride. Warning for anyone using biometrics as ID, this is a sucking security hole!
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In unrelated news, theft of knives and bolt cutters has risen one thousand per cent. Police say they are baffled by this bizarre crime wave.
FOB (Score:1)
"Your thumb or your life" (Score:1)
Seriously, how soon before someone makes a wax impression or other fake thumbprint to fool the machine?
molds to make fake thumbs (Score:1)
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Re:this is going to leed to allot of... (Score:5, Funny)
of illiterate Indians?
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I guess I'll shut up now, it's hard to be PC and funny sometimes, and in a hurry to.
Still trying to get first post
again I did not meen to offend.
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New Indian Crime Wave (Score:1, Redundant)
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The plot thickens... (Score:1, Interesting)
Leper colonies... (Score:5, Funny)
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Hanson's Disease (Score:2)
ATM theft (Score:2)
Numbers (Score:3, Insightful)
Unless these ATMs hand out 10 bucks (or equivalent) per press the user will still have to understand what they are reading on the screen. I accept that many Indians may not be able to write a letter but surely memorising a four digit PIN is not so hard?
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or: "Test on low exposure customers"... (Score:5, Interesting)
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I have been to many private banks and they all have atleast a Rs. 5000 minimum deposit! I dont know where you are getting your 500 minimum from (a govt. owned bank I guess..) Citibank has way higher minimum deposit limits the last time I checked.. (Rs. 2 lakhs (~$4700 minimum) for their personal account.. and yes they had called me up to take their rip-off account so I know I got the minimum right..)
Anyways, something about this just does not sound right. First of all the poor people will always prefer
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I dont know where you are getting your 500 minimum from (a govt. owned bank I guess..)
Of course. The vast majority of banks in India are state-run (both in terms of number of banks, number of branches, deposits, areas of operation) And as far as private banks in India are concerned, they're unethical and badly run, with a veneer of marketing gloss on them. I've banked with HSBC, Federal, Syndicate, UCO and State Bank of India and while their staff are the most grouchy, State Bank is the most professional.
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It's India and they're poor! (Score:1, Interesting)
That's unless the Banks etc., start to give them credit/loans.
Seems like the carrot and stick method for a new market, take loans/credit out with us and we'll make Billions.
I see lots of people going bankrupt in India in the future.
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2. ???
3. Profit!
Mixed feelings (Score:2, Insightful)
It is very unlikely that illiterate farmers will understand how exactly these ATMs work or for that matter, the banking system itself (which is so complex that most Americans don't understand all the fees and restrictions involv
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Illiteracy != stupidity. These farmers aren't from Mars; they can understand the concepts of fee
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Which is exactly what has happened in the United States. Angry about ever-escalating fees (bank fees have risen more or less continuously for the past decade, and are growing far faster than inflation) - fees which for most banks and credit-card issuers now constitute most of their profit
Kind of Scary... (Score:3, Informative)
Considering these results I don't think chopping off thumbs will even be necessary...
So... how many (Score:1)
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Give a man a fire (Score:2, Troll)
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Gummy Bear Sales to Skyrocket? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Free money? (Score:2)
Why can't these idiots ever understand that fingerprints aren't secrets?
So now I can collect a fingerprint from someone (you know you leave them on everything you touch, right?) and have instant access to their bank account?
Mandatory reading for biometric proponents: Fun with fingerprint readers [schneier.com]
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The fingerprint is a what-you-are item, instead of a what-you-have item like an ATM card. It has the benefit that you can't easily lose it. That is, once it is clear that a cut-off thumb doesn't pay up. Which might take a disappointingly long time.
A PIN code is a what-you-know item, which should be combined with one of the above items, but if the fingerprint reader can reli
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1) Print readers do exist that can detect warmth, the electro-conductivity of the finger, and pulse. These readers are more expensive, and less reliable. Do you really think a bank would risk pissed off customers because no one who forgot their gloves on a cold day could withdraw their money from an ATM?
2) It's rather easy to make a thin overlay they fits on a finger, but has someone else's print. (See the James Bond movie
How does this work? (Score:1, Insightful)
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ATMs for the poor? (Score:1)
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Why do poor people need ATMs?
Grameen Bank (whose founder Mohammed Yunis just got the Nobel Peace Prize) built a mobile phone system in Bangladesh for poor people. This allows them to do things like find buyers for the shirts they make using the sewing machines they bought with the $75 they borrowed from Grameen.
The article about CITI says this:
Social Darwinism (Score:1)
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Wrong -- banks don't trust the poor. If you don't have a steady income to the bank, they do obnoxious things like hold the check until it completely clears, or impose an arbitrary service fee that the not-poor not only barely notice, but actually don't have.
Check-cashing locations exist because the annoyance of banking as a poor American is greater than 10% of their wages. (Hint: if we wanted to give the poor the advantage of banking, we'd require that ALL employers offer direct dep
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Problem solved eh? (Score:1)
Already in place in Singapore (Score:1)
Profit? (Score:2)
2. Give bank accounts to the poor in India (you know, people who have no money to deposit)
3. ????????
4. Profit(?)
Corporate morality (Score:1)
Star Trek reference (Score:1)
"I assume your hand will open this door whether you are conscious or not."
-- Data to the time traveller from the past
Banking in India... (Score:2)
The liberalisation of Indian economy in the 90s, the banking sector had multinational banks entering catering to the upper/middle class. Citigroup is one of those 'new age banks' (as they are called in India). They behave like western financial institutions - high fees, web/telephone connectivity, hidden charges, legalese, and a lot more.
New age banks does not allow provisions like a zero balance account. Older nationalized banks are flexible with such provisions (s
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So after returning to India after about two years, I went to this new-age, corporate bank last week to open a new bank account. The branch was swank, with polished tiles, air-conditioning, some fascinating frescoes (drawings of the old Hyderabadi currency; fancy that, eh) and a generally better upkeep than most public sector banks I was used to from my childhood. The offered me debit cards (yes, two of them), an instant photo (didn't bring my photo; why do they collect photographs in just about every form y
Blood (Score:2, Funny)
I might be stating the obvious here.... (Score:2)
So somebody wants to setup an ATM for them? I certainly don't mean to come off as an insensitive clod but there's some problems with this:
-The friggin' transaction fees are probably more money than they make in a month.
-Poor people don't use banks
-Illiterate people don't have a clue about how or why they would need this
Lastly,
-Poor people work very hard doing manual labor--their hands are very rough and scarred.
I can't get biomentric technology to wor
Why India? (Score:1)
But why India? There are 56 million unbanked people in the US:
http://www.forbes.com/business/2005/02/23/0223find svpunbanked.html [forbes.com]
This might be an insensitive question but... (Score:4, Insightful)
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In fact I bet you can't name any (not mentally or physically disabled) group of people who don't underestand any language at all.
Also (pin) numbers are numbers, and are the same in any language.
Also when someone uses a ATM, they're gonna have to be able to read the screen anyway.
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Not so new - ATMs for the poor in Bolivia (Score:1)
Building a Better ATM [brinq.com]
PRODEM Private Financial Fund has been using specially designed ATMs for poorer communities in Bolivia for several years now. The ATMs uses smart cards, finger prints, and a multilingual voice-driver interface with a color coded system. The cost is about half of the cost of traditional ATMs.
From the World Resources Institute:
Serving the Poor Profitably in Bolivia [wri.org]
customer satisfaction (Score:1)
Money balance? (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be more cost effective to just teach them how to use the ATM when they sign up for an ATM card?
Fingerprint Scanners Fooled By Play-Doh (Score:2)
Citigroup may be evil (Score:1)
My Other ATM Card Is A Begging Bowl (Score:1)
I do agree that in general, some form of biometric verification is good when making financial transactions, just not sure if this is the ideal place for such a rollout.
Pushpak (Score:1)
Btw, this isn't really offtopic - just a tangential reference to an old (and really enjoyable) Hindi movie. The movie itself is entirely without any dialogue, so you don't even have to know Hindi (or any other language!) to watch it
No philanthropy here (Score:1)
Putting things in perspective (Score:1)
Sure, it's not philanthropy. But it may well do a lot of good. I'd like to make a couple of points and ask a few questions:
1. 'Slum Dwellers' are poor. But they can still own televisions and radios. They do spend considerable sums when getting married/on special occasions. Giving them banking facilities makes sense.
2.
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Re:Citi is the antichrist: yes yes (Score:1)
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