MPs have condemned the level of IT failures at banks, warning that financial levies on firms and more regulation may be needed.
A Treasury Committee report said the frequency of online banking crashes and customer disruption was "unacceptable". The report, published on Monday, said with bank branches and cash machines closing, there was greater urgency to ensure online banking worked. Customers are being left "cashless and cut off", the report said. Firms could do much more to ensure their IT systems were resilient and to resolve complaints and compensation more quickly.
The MPs suggest the three major regulators - Financial Conduct Authority, Prudential Regulation Authority, Bank of England - do not have the staff and experience to deal with the growing number of computer failures. An increase in the financial levies on banks may be needed to ensure that the regulators are adequately funded and resourced , the report says.
MPs are also worried about the increase use of third-party providers of cloud services for computing power and data storage. "The consequences of a major operational incident at a large cloud service provider, such as Microsoft, Google or Amazon, could be significant," the report said. "There is, therefore, a considerable case for the regulation of these cloud service providers to ensure high standards of operational resilience." Cloud services "stood out as such a source of systemic risk" for the financial system, the MPs said.
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 30 2019, @05:00AM
So now you need two phones, one with the banking app, and keep it secure, and other to go around with a reduced bank app ("cash for the cashless world"), for example to the bar?
Remembering how good software and hardware is, next step will be one phone per bank or any important service. Otherwise a compromise in one of those apps (or 3rd party one, or OS or hardware) could leave you in a really bad position when all them go rogue.