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Banks look to a future with AI - The Nation

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Artificial intelligence (AI) is set to revolutionise the Thai banking sector, but many are worried about governance issues amid the challenge of integrating AI into bank operations. AI is creeping into the lives of people around the world. One way or the other, people are increasingly interacting with AI whether through their smart phones, computers or surveillance cameras. In the business sector, Thai banks are active in deploying AI into their operations, aiming to woo more customers, earn more profits and improve the management of their businesses. "We have been working with many Thai banks on our AI machine-learning technology," said Scott Zoldi, chief analytics officer at FICO, a leading analytic software company based in California.


Now, banks take to artificial intelligence to prevent frauds - Times of India

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Chennai: Buying on Amazon, Flipkart or Snapdeal always comes with the prompt Do you want to save your card details?' A question that poses a lot of risks -at the merchant gateway, bank and customer end -irrespective of whether it is a large retailer or your neighbourhood florist and confectioners.For banks, customers using e-commerce sites poses the debate of convenience versus security . With convenience comes lesser steps and faster buying, but higher security would mean multiple authentications and more time -so to strike a fine balance between the two -Indian banks are now looking at software products like FSS' Access Control, geo-fencing of accounts and rule-based access. "What it means is, if you use your card at an ATM in Chennai and in the next 5 minutes your husband tries to buy a product online from an ecommerce site from Delhi -the card could get blocked or ask for further authentication. With artificial intelligence, the system could sense this is an unusual transaction because the same card is being used within 5 minutes at locations more than 1,000 kilometres apart," says Suresh Raja gopalan, president products, FSS. Banks now have the capability to set rules to ensure that any unusual transaction gets blocked or requires multiple authenticators.


Banks use artificial intelligence to prevent frauds - Times of India

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CHENNAI: Buying on Amazon, Flipkart or Snapdeal always comes with the prompt'Do you want to save your card details?' A question that poses a lot of risks -- at the merchant gateway, bank and customer end -- irrespective of whether it is a large retailer or your neighbourhood florist and confectioners. For banks, customers using e-commerce sites poses the debate of convenience versus security. With convenience comes lesser steps and faster buying, but higher security would mean multiple authentications and more time -- so to strike a fine balance between the two -- Indian banks are now looking at software products like FSS' Access Control, geo-fencing of accounts and rule-based access. "What it means is, if you use your card at an ATM in Chennai and in the next 5 minutes your husband tries to buy a product online from an e-commerce site from Delhi -- the card could get blocked or ask for further authentication. With artificial intelligence, the system could sense this is an unusual transaction because the same card is being used within 5 minutes at locations more than 1,000 kilometres apart," says Suresh Rajagopalan, president products, FSS.