The Sunday Guardian

Firewall transactio­ns to be fixed by digital payment providers

- NISHANT ARORA & SOURABH KULESH

At a time when the cyber vulnerabil­ity in the payment gateways of e-wallet companies are becoming visible as they witness a rise in usage and popularity, upgraded security is the only way to safeguard millions of first-time users.

In December, the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) registered a case against 15 Paytm customers for allegedly cheating the digital wallet of Rs 6.15 lakh ($9,000). This was done on a complaint by Paytm’s parent company One97, which is backed by China’s Alibaba Group.

The case was registered under various sections dealing with criminal conspiracy, forgery, etc. — and under provisions of the Informatio­n Technology (IT) Act.

According to top company executives, wallet security has been a prime concern for them post-demonetisa­tion as trans- actions have grown manifold.

“No one can actually hack into our servers and steal data or money because there are different levels of security,” Deepak Abbot, Senior Vice President at Paytm, told IANS, adding that they have intrusion-detection programmes by thirdparty security experts that regularly check the systems for any vulnerabil­ity.

Paytm claims to have over 177 million users (as of December 2016) and have handled nearly one billion transactio­ns last year.

According to Abbot, the number of transactio­ns at Paytm is up three times as compared to the numbers recorded before demonetisa­tion and the volume has grown 3.5 times.

“Paytm saw 14-15% growth month-on-month even before demonetisa­tion. When the cash situation improves in the country, we may not see a 100% growth, but we will settle for a much higher percentage of growth,” Abbot told IANS.

Abbot pointed out that the Paytm wallet is PCI-DSS certified which is a proprietar­y informatio­n security standard for organisati­ons dealing with online transactio­ns.

“As per the RBI guidelines, every wallet needs to keep the users’ money in an escrow account. So even if the escrow account is of Paytm, the company cannot access it. Also, on a daily basis, the company has to share the transactio­n data with RBI. We are as transparen­t as can be because of the rules and regulation­s,”Abbot noted.

According to Rohan Khara, Director of Product, MobiKwik, their user base has crossed 45 million and they are witnessing five million transactio­ns daily.

“MobiKwik takes security very seriously. It is PCI-DSS and ISO27001 certified, takes care of the various informatio­n security measures to ensure the security of applicatio­n and protects its business from emerging threats and frauds,” Khara told IANS.

“We are soon launching a PIN with which users can access their account through an alternate number in case of a lost phone,” Khara added.

Digital payments platform FreeCharge recently announced India’s first e-wallet protection plan for its users. Under this, the underlying wallet balance of all the customers will be insured up to a limit of Rs 20,000 as long as the user is transactin­g at least once a month.

“The facility, in partnershi­p with Reliance General Insurance Company Limited, will be offered free-of-cost to all users. This move by FreeCharge is another step in safeguardi­ng the money in the event of theft or loss of phone,” Govind Rajan, Chief Executive Officer, FreeCharge, told IANS.

The number of cards and addresses saved on digital payments platform FreeCharge has now crossed 70 million.

Since demonetisa­tion, FreeCharge saw frequent users jump from about five times a month to more than 15 times a month. It has also seen a fourfold surge in web traffic and a threefold surge in app downloads.

FreeCharge was seeing a 15% month-on-month growth (average daily) on consumer acquisitio­n pre-demonetisa­tion, and now it has grown to 200%.

Security experts emphasise that as the numbers grow, newer forms of vulnerabil­ities will be exposed in the payment gateways, suggesting that upgraded security is the only way to safeguard small and medium businesses from losing their hard-earned money.

According to Abbot, first-time users are more exposed to digital frauds.

“Just like customers reveal their passwords or OTPs in the banking system to unidentifi­ed people, they are doing it in the case of mobile wallets as well. Fraudsters are calling people saying they are from Paytm and extracting money from the users,” Abbot pointed out.

Citing the main reason why bank apps have not fared well till date, Abott said banks have the consumers but they do not have the merchant base.

“With Paytm having nearly 65% market share, we are absolutely not worried about the competitio­n because it takes time to build a base. In fact, we will be happy if a worthy competitor comes up,” Abbot told IANS. IANS

Just like customers reveal their passwords or OTPs in the banking system to unidentifi­ed people, they are doing it in the case of mobile wallets as well.

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