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April 16, 2021
RBI Deputy Governor M Rajeshwar Rao×
It is the sharing and leveraging of customer-permissioned data by banks with third-party developers and firms to build applications and services. Open banking may potentially pose significant risks and concerns around financial privacy and data security, customer liability, cybersecurity and operational risks, among others, cautioned Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor M Rajeshwar Rao.
Open banking is the sharing and leveraging of customer-permissioned data by banks with third-party developers and firms to build applications and services, including those that provide real-time payments, greater financial transparency options for account holders, marketing and cross-selling opportunities.
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It is not an understatement to say that the economy is powered by software. So when a decision comes down from the U.S. Supreme Court on the extent to which software can be owned, it deservingly acquires “landmark case” status, as has Monday’s decision in
Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc., which provided some guidance in the context of a special type of software known as an Application Programming Interface or “API”.
Software is, in the words of the Copyright Act’s definition of a computer program, a “set of statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result.” When we think of software generally, we might be more inclined to think of patents – which are designed typically to protect inventions that do something. And, certainly, software does something. Unlike patent law, the law of copyright is designed to protect the expressive q