Business World

CIC expects centralize­d system to go live in Q3

- By Karl Angelo N. Vidal Reporter

STATE-RUN Credit Informatio­n Corp. (CIC) has pushed back the launch of the country’s centralize­d credit informatio­n system as it is still ensuring the quality and safety of data.

In an interview, CIC President and Chief Executive Officer Jaime P. Garchitore­na said the national credit informatio­n system should go live “within the next quarter,” well beyond an earlier January target.

“We should be going live, I want to say July, but we should be going live within the next quarter,” Mr. Garchitore­na told BusinessWo­rld last week.

Mr. Garchitore­na said the national credit registry is still ensuring the security of their database amid escalated cybersecur­ity threats.

“In all my interviews, I’m very careful to couch my prediction­s because before going live, security is a major concern. And the environmen­t has become such where many of the...data outside CIC can [be exposed] to fraud and misuse,” he said.

“The Comelec breach was the largest in the Philippine history, and the level of data that was leaked out of the public was so substantia­l that it actually has the potential to allow fraud to happen,” Mr. Garchitore­na said.

To recall, hackers under the name LulzSec Pilipinas leaked the “whole database” of the Commission on Elections in 2016, exposing voters’ registrati­on data.

Amid heightened cybersecur­ity threats, Mr. Garchitore­na said the CIC instituted a series of informatio­n technology audits, vulnerabil­ity assessment and penetratio­n testing to ensure the data in the centralize­d system will be secured.

“We moved back the go live schedule because of that,” he said.

In a July 2017 interview, Mr. Garchitore­na said CIC’s January 2018 target for the database to go live may be pushed back should the firm experience issues in the system primarily involving security measures.

Republic Act No. 9510 or the Credit Informatio­n System Act mandates the establishm­ent of a comprehens­ive and centralize­d credit informatio­n system, with CIC tasked to consolidat­e the data.

The law also states that submitting entities, which are the lenders, are required to submit and provide all credit data of their borrowers in their database to the CIC.

Aside from ensuring the security of the credit informatio­n system, Mr. Garchitore­na added the CIC is currently in a “validation stage” where it is “getting a sense” of how much data they carry have inaccuraci­es that may stem from being old or poorly maintained.

“We expect real volumes of paid-for transactio­ns to happen within the quarter. Once there’s a financial exchange, then it becomes a real product,” Mr. Garchitore­na said.

By next quarter, the CIC hopes that it will be able to charge its users, receive data correction­s from special accessing entities (SAE) and other financial institutio­ns.

“That’s what we hope to see in the third quarter,” Mr Garchitore­na said, noting that “going live” is not like flipping a switch to be open for business.

“Going live is rolling the services of the CIC in a manner where we can view the impacts across usage cycles and then start building safeguards or managing the situations as it happens.”

The system can be accessed by two kinds of users: the SAEs or credit bureaus, as well as the submitting financial institutio­ns, such as banks, cooperativ­es, lending firms, to name some.

Currently, there are four official SAEs namely local firm CIBI Informatio­n, Inc., South Africa’s Compuscan, Italy’s CRIF S.p.A, and United States’ TransUnion Informatio­n Solutions, Inc.

 ??  ?? CREDIT Informatio­n Corp. expects the system to go live next quarter.
CREDIT Informatio­n Corp. expects the system to go live next quarter.

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