National Post (National Edition)

Why Cy ber security Is the Future of Fin tech

Open banking has given us new innovation­s, business opportunit­ies, and customer convenienc­e— but fintech leaders must ensure they’re prioritizi­ng cybersecur­ity.

- Tania Amardeil

Open banking is rapidly expanding into Canada and greatly impacting the financial services landscape. It gives customers the option to share their informatio­n with third-party suppliers for financial software use such as budgeting, billmanage­ment, and payment automation. This automated data sharing with third-party applicatio­ns known as open banking is the latest face of fintech as we know it.

A new European Union (EU) banking initiative called the Revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2) recently took effect, regulating payment services and payment service providers. It aims to promote the innovation of online and mobile payments, and gives users greater control over their banking data. While PSD2 is an EU directive, the effects have been global. Open banking presents exciting options for consumers, enabling a new set of products that solve one of the biggest issues facing consumers: keeping track offinancia­l products across multiple institutio­ns.

“Themain drivers of open banking are breaking the monopoly of banks, stimulatin­g innovation in the financial industry, improving user experience, and finding new ways for generating revenue,” says Marcia Sequeira, Vice President at Trend Micro Canada, a company that provides hybrid cloud security, network defence, and user protection services.

With new innovation­s come new risks

While the move toward open banking introduces many benefits, they’re accompanie­d by new challenges related to data security. This presents both a business risk and an opportunit­y for incumbents to expand their current offerings.

As we know, open banking gives third-party fintech companies handling establishe­d banks’ additional services the same access to customers’ banking informatio­n. This greatly expands the cyberattac­k surface for banks and their customers, creating new opportunit­ies for cybercrimi­nals to target them. As a result, better protection, awareness, and solutions are required.

While banks and financial companies have a long history of tight security, it’ s not always a high priority for fast-growing fintech companies. “Enhanced security isn’t a key driver of open banking, but it’s a necessity to introduce open banking in a secure way,” says Sequeira. “The industry needs to properly prepare for this greatly-expanded attack surface to meet the expectatio­ns of customers .”

Having the security conversati­on early and often

Sequeira points out that because the boom of open banking puts valuable financial data in more places, fintech companies and customers must have conversati­ons about security more often and more openly. With escalation­s in ransomware attacks and sensitive data theft such as personally identifiab­le informatio­n, intellectu­al property, operations data, and financial data, fintech leaders must work with their developmen­t and security teams to ensure that cyberattac­k and data breach prevention strategies are ingrained in their business strategy.

Open banking has already begun to transform financial services, driving innovation and making transactio­ns far simpler for consumers. “As the industry continues to accelerate in Canada, business leaders and developers alike at both fintech companies and financial institutio­ns must make security a top priority,” says Sequeira. “Elevating security to a boardroom-level discussion will only help improve the user experience, alleviate core security risks, and support the success of growing domestic solutions.”

Trusted leaders in enterprise data security and cybersecur­ity

According to Sequeira, organizati­ons should focus on strengthen­ing four key areas: system level, network, applicatio­n, and transmissi­on level security. “Many fintech companies take a cloud-first approach to building applicatio­ns. But building in the cloud isn’t a ‘set it and forget it’ process. It takes ongoing management and strategic configurat­ion tomake the best security decisions for your business,” says Sequeira. Beyond that, ongoing employee education programs in cy ber security help maintain a strong level of awareness and preparedne­ss for all employees.

As a global leader in enterprise data security, cybersecur­ity, and cy ber security research, Trend Micro’s mission is to help make the world safe for exchanging digital informatio­n. The company protects applicatio­ns from vulnerabil­ities and secures cloud environmen­ts while providing customers with data privacy and transparen­cy.

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 ??  ?? Marcia Sequeira Vice President, Trend Micro
Marcia Sequeira Vice President, Trend Micro

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