Business World

Humans fight back against robots mining personal finance data

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REGULATORS are beginning to teach robots who’s the boss.

After spending billions of dollars on cutting-edge artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es, Europe’s banks and insurers face tougher scrutiny of the tools they use to help root out fraud, check borrowers’ creditwort­hiness and automate claims decisions. European Union rules starting this week will stress human oversight and consumer protection, which may hamper companies trying to build the tools of the future.

“Companies developing AI technologi­es will have to consider and embed the data protection issues into the design process,” David Martin, senior legal officer at Brussels-based consumer advocate BEUC, said in an interview. “It’s not something where they can just tick a box at the end.”

The rules could present an obstacle to coders looking to design ever more sophistica­ted algorithms. That may handicap EU firms that are competing with rivals in US and Asia to develop new technologi­es, according to Nick Wallace, a Brussels-based senior policy analyst at the Center for Data Innovation, a nonpartisa­n and nonprofit research institute.

“For an algorithmi­c model to be transparen­t to a human, even a human with a fairly good understand­ing of algorithms, it needs to be kept within a certain level of complexity,” Wallace said. “The more abstractio­ns you have, let alone the more data points, the harder it’s going to be for any human being to sit down, read through all of it and scrutinize the decision.”

Regulators worldwide are trying to catch up with the financial industry’s rush to automate everything from trading desks to lending decisions and customer help-desks. The banking industry will invest $3.3 billion in AI and related technologi­es this year, making it the second-biggest spender after retail, research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp. (IDC) estimates. Overall spending on the technologi­es will grow to $52.2 billion by 2021 from about $19 billion this year, according to IDC.

The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation being introduced on May 25 will generally require firms to get consent from people when their personal data is used to fully automate certain types of decisions that have significan­t effects, such as whether to award a loan. Clients will have the right to demand a firm’s human employee intervene and review a decision, and they will have the power to get details about an automated process to help guard against discrimina­tory practices.

“Major corporatio­ns recognize that this is a challenge and that privacy rights and data protection rights need to be given full considerat­ion during the design and developmen­t of any kind of product or service,” John Bowman, London-based senior principal at Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp.’s Promontory Financial Group subsidiary, said in an interview.

COMPANY CONCERNS

As policy makers ironed out the details of the regulation­s over the past year, financial industry lobbies including the Associatio­n for Financial Markets in Europe and UK Finance pressed authoritie­s to tread softly and to acknowledg­e ways the technologi­es can benefit consumers. In a 24-page letter to policy makers, the European Banking Federation said “profiling activities should not necessaril­y be perceived as having a negative impact on customers.”

The law is being closely watched by the insurance industry, where four out of five executives say that AI systems will be used alongside human staffers within the next two years, consultant Accenture said in a report this year.

The UK arm of Ageas, a Brusselsba­sed insurer, is looking to speed up the handling of thousands of claims for car insurance by using AI software to review images of vehicle damage and help estimate a repair job. GDPR won’t affect the current technology, and the insurer has included the law’s requiremen­ts in its processes, an Ageas spokeswoma­n said.

Allianz SE, Europe’s biggest insurer, uses data and machine-learning technologi­es in several areas of its insurance business. That includes automating what was once a paper-based and manual underwriti­ng process for small- and medium-sized businesses.

Automatic decision making is typically based either on consent or as a condition for entering a contract, according to Philipp Raether, chief privacy officer at Munich-based Allianz Group.

“In scenarios where profiling is necessary for entering into a contract, this will be made transparen­t to the customer in an understand­able way,” Raether said. —

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