However, says the card payments major, restricting data flows in digital transactions will affect the quality of fraud detection and assessment.
Mastercard
is confident of completing its data localisation requirements in
India by the end of this year. However, says the card payments major,
restricting data flows in digital transactions will affect the
quality of fraud detection and assessment.
“We
are totally committed. In fact, we are in full execution mode...And,
we remain completely committed to the end of the year (deadline) that
we have given to the Reserve Bank of India. So, I don't see a
challenge on the question of data localisation," said Ari
Sarker, its Asia-Pacific co-president.
However,
he adds, this restricting of cross-border data flow and storing data
only in India will impact fraud detection and management.
As
an example, says Mastercard, it stores only aggregate and anonymised
data, such as the amount spent on a transaction, the account number
and so on. If an Indian travels abroad the card gets compromised
there, and the fraudster uses these credentials to withdraw money
from different ATMs in different country locations, it will be
difficult for the person to know on a real-time basis that such fraud
is happening.
Similarly,
if a fraud trend is detected in different countries and Indian
transaction data is disconnected from world data, fraud detection
engines here will end up getting built only on local trends.
"Our
data scientists tell us that for the sake of accuracy of the trend,
you need 13 months of data — then, you can really see how behaviour
patterns actually shift. That's the historical perspective you need
to create...our view on that (data localisation) is it's actually not
in India's interest," Sarker said.
New
ID check
Mastercard
will go live on Google Pay, the information technology giant's
payments app, launched first in India as Google Tez in 2017. "We're
going to be live with Google in the first quarter (of the next
financial year). The essence is tokenised credentials or pass-through
credentials working through Google Pay. The reason we're going first
quarter is also because we're also delivering our ID Check capability
together with it. It will be a better product capability once we
launch through Google Pay," Sarker said.
Last
month, Google Pay launched a feature called tokenised cards. This
will let users add debit and credit cards to the Google Pay
application, which has so far worked only on the Unified Payments
Platform in India.
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