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Data Security and Privacy concerns for the Indian Banking Industry
Ratan Jyoti, Chief Manager (Information Security), Vijaya Bank


Ratan Jyoti, Chief Manager (Information Security), Vijaya Bank
The era of internet escalated banking has brought the banking channels to customer’s hand. This is possible because of communications and exchange of a very large set of data. Many of these communications involves interchange of confidential data. As the data belongs to customers, their security is the prime concerns for the banks. Privacy preservation is of also equally important as no party can be trusted enough over the public networks without checks and verification.
Information security and privacy are now considered major concerns in the Indian Banking environment. The web and mobile environment constructs an amazing infrastructure for the current day banking transactions. A genuine security issue revolves around electronic currency and digital cash which is built around critical customer information for which customer can be exposed to and thus information security and privacy becomes the important matter in Indian digital economy.
India is supposed to be new favourite destination for data theft and banking sector is not untouched. For Banking sector customer data can not only be used to perpetrate cyber frauds but can also be sold in the black market for other business gains. In last year or two there has been spurt in data theft in Indian banks. It is estimated that Indian Banks are directly losing a significant part of their income due to data theft. In terms of reported incidents, the figure of loss for public sector banks is lesser as compared to the private and foreign banks in India. However, it is a wakeup call for all the banks in India. Some banks processing customer data fail to fully secure their systems, mainly because they feel that data security is related only to Information Technology. However manual and non-IT controls are a bigger security risk today. Some banks, for example, fail to identify the boundaries of their system and may not be in a position to mitigate all of the risks.