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Why India's move toward a cashless society could increase cybercrime

ashok321

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https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017...al&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

When the Indian government recently banned two high-value currency notes, it led to all sorts of chaos. It led to huge queues to exchange money at banks and ATMs. And this in a country where more than half of its citizens do not have a bank account.

But as the dust continues to settle, a tangible long-term benefit of the process appears to be emerging: moving India towards a digital economy in which electronic transactions play a major role in the financial system. The rush to do this, however, is likely to cause a spike in cybercrime.

The Indian government’s push to get ordinary citizens using plastic and digital money is evident in the launch of various schemes like the BHIM app to incentivise digital payments by the poor, rural and illiterate who have hitherto been unrepresented in the country’s modern banking systems.

Encouraging cashless transactions has the potential to curb tax evasion, corruption and the use of hard cash in crime. And to that extent it is a worthy goal to follow for any government. But adequate measures have not been taken to ensure that the hard-earned money of ordinary Indians is secure from the cybercrime that will inevitably follow.

The repeated assertion made by Indian banks and online portals is that they use the latest security protocols and hence they are as secure as any other similar business in the developed world. Even though there is a degree of truth in this argument, it is dangerous to accept it as evidence of sufficient protection for Indian consumers from digital fraud.

Human error
The transition to a digital economy will create several new opportunities for financial crime against citizens who will have their first experience of digital India. That will leave them vulnerable to losing their precious assets to new kinds of criminals. Most will be completely unaware of how cybercrime works – and therefore in no position to guard against it.

Research into the field of IT security consistently shows that the Achilles’ heel of systems lies at the consumer’s end. And this is an area where neither the Indian government nor the banks or online portals seem to have any plan of action in place.

Humans are the weakest link in IT security. Decades of researchhas shown that there is an inverse relationship between the effort required to follow an IT security protocol and its compliance by ordinary consumers. In other words, the banks can put hi-tech security measures in place, but if they are too complicated to follow for a poor farmer in rural India then ironically the same measures may make him even more vulnerable to cybercrime.

The point is best illustrated through a well-known anecdote that gets told in the field of IT security. The security team of a sensitive corporation kept coming up with rules that required the employees to generate more and more complicated passwords to log into the system. They believed that it would make the company virtually unhackable to criminals. However, all their effort came to nought when the employees – fed up with remembering long combinations of words and symbols – simply started writing their passwords on pieces of paper and sticking them to their computer screens.

Conscious effort required
It is for this reason, that over the last few decades a conscious effort has been made to educate people and provide usable security protocols when using debit cards and the internet for financial transactions.

Psychologists, systems engineers, software designers and financial experts have all been involved in the process to identify the capacity of ordinary people to follow security measures and design practical solutions for them. It is an area of security research that is growing outside the digital realm as well. In domains such as infrastructure security, for example, it has been found that even specialists like train drivers fail to follow complicated security procedures.

Many of the new digital clients in India will not be tech-savvy or well-educated and may be vulnerable to cybercrime for reasons such as age, income or social status. They will have a unique set of constraints that will have an impact on their ability to conduct safe electronic transactions.

Unlike the latest technical IT security expertise that Indian banks and online portals have adapted from the West, the methods for designing usable security are not directly transferable. This requires a long-term effort to study consumer behaviour and the specific challenges of users in the Indian context.

Left to themselves, ordinary people in India are experienced at protecting their valuables from criminals. Any traveller on Indian public transport will vouch for that, from the surfeit of chained luggage in trains and buses to prevent thieves from running away with it.

It is now the responsibility of the Indian government, financial institutions and business to ensure that the common citizen is equally well prepared to protect their money from cyber-criminals, through access to usable security. Efforts must start immediately, if it has not already been left too late.
 
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Not one sane argument, but only accusations. Way to go.

The article is right on the money. This could very well be the future in India.

Did you note that I had actually thanked the thread? So surely whatever I had to say was not against it? You guys have to shed your hatred if Indians it makes you blind to some pretty obvious things.
 
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While I would like to comment on the thread, @ashok321 tends to get abusive at the drop of a hat so no point in doing so.

You have less than 2 years on PDF, and you have handful of negatives a la -9
But you have audacity to blame others?

All hat no cattle.
 
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You have less than 2 years on PDF, and you have handful of negatives a la -9
But you have audacity to blame others?

All hat no cattle.

Unlike you I don't spend my time spewing garbage that Pakistani members here will love. I speak my mind equally instead of focusing on only what will not anger the "hosts".

Question is, despite that, you have only 3 positives ratings and an equal number of negatives. How mediocre are you?
 
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Unlike you I don't spend my time spewing garbage that Pakistani members here will love. I speak my mind equally instead of focusing on only what will not anger the "hosts".

Question is, despite that, you have only 3 positives ratings and an equal number of negatives. How mediocre are you?

This is as silly as a goose.
I am better than you on these ratings.
And I see that you have no substance left within you to debunk my claims, but you are pumped up with audacity as usual.

You are all foam no beer.

Ignored!
 
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Cyber crime and cyber policing go hand in hand .
Despite laws crime happen does that mean laws are weak and should be erased . Does that mean we should not even attempt ?

Thousands of years ago across various ages , humans have been challenged by their surrounding . Those who gave up perished , those who fought hard battles and became victorious began a new era .

If humans had feared fire and extinguished it , what kind of future we would be living in ?
 
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This is as silly as a goose.
I am better than you on these ratings.
And I see that you have no substance left within you to debunk my claims, but you are pumped up with audacity as usual.

You are all foam no beer.

Ignored!

You do have some abilities at convincing yourself, if no one else, I can give you that. What you just wrote is a 10-year old's idea of a final retort. Have a nice day.
 
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Despite laws crime happen does that mean laws are weak and should be erased .

Every country has laws, Sudan & Somalia included. However its not the set of laws alone, its how you implement & enforce them. Singapore & the US does the best job on implementation. India being a poor case, despite the so called nationalist government at the helm.

First there were thieves, then came the police.
Because the necessity is the mother of invention.
Valmiki, who wrote Ramayan was a thief himself first.

This cat & mouse game will go on perpetually.
 
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Every country has laws, Sudan & Somalia included. However its not the set of laws alone, its how you implement & enforce them. Singapore & the US does the best job on implementation. India being a poor case, despite the so called nationalist government at the helm.

First there were thieves, then came the police.
Because the necessity is the mother of invention.
Valmiki, who wrote Ramayan was a thief himself first.

This cat & mouse game will go on perpetually.

In short we need better administration than government which eventually starts from home .

Because there are thieves we have police . What is the need of police if people follow right way of living . Indians are lawless and corrupt why blame government . The root of all issues are we ourselves .

We applied for electricity connection 5 months ago . Every formality done but none came to connect wire and Meter for past 4 months . It's people like us who are not doing their work obediently .

Now if government starts forcing people to do correct things the same people make loud noices of intolerance .
 
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Now if government starts forcing people to do correct things the same people make loud noices of intolerance .


Because those people know by seeing & reading newspaper that the GOI/Modi is not doing enough.

Not only that, but the PM has been found to be deceptive - one that refuses to exhibit his degree despite RTI/EC.

degree9.png


Indian people also realize that Modi is doing natakbazi on notebandi, involving India alone, while leaving foreign funds untouched, exactly where massive funds are parked.

His crony capitalism is also exposed by way of quid pro quo deals of receiving elections funds through electoral bonds and giving hefty defense contracts to Ambanis.

Indians are disillusioned just as they see Lalu, Sharad Pawar & Sonia Maino's money is untouched overseas.

Modi is ruling by fooling.
 
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Because those people know by seeing & reading newspaper that the GOI/Modi is not doing enough.

Not only that, but the PM has been found to be deceptive - one that refuses to exhibit his degree despite RTI/EC.

View attachment 391360

Indian people also realize that Modi is doing natakbazi on notebandi, involving India alone, while leaving foreign funds untouched, exactly where massive funds are parked.

His crony capitalism is also exposed by way of quid pro quo deals of receiving elections funds through electoral bonds and giving hefty defense contracts to Ambanis.

Indians are disillusioned just as they see Lalu, Sharad Pawar & Sonia Maino's money is untouched overseas.

Modi is ruling by fooling.

So what is the alternative ? Rahul , Lalu or Arvind .
India is not a monarchy where bad rulers can be dethroned by force . We are a democracy , come up with a better model of development and defeat Modi .

By blind and bias criticism , Modi will only get stronger .
 
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So what is the alternative ? Rahul , Lalu or Arvind .
India is not a monarchy where bad rulers can be dethroned by force . We are a democracy , come up with a better model of development and defeat Modi .

By blind and bias criticism , Modi will only get stronger .

Super Gathbandan on Bihar lines is waiting for Modi, come 2019.

Questioning Modi's degree does not point any bias criticism.
If you have it, flaunt it.
Through the RTI they found Arvind Kejriwal's degree, but stonewalling when it is Modi?
What kind of India and its people?

degree5.png


No wonder people taunt Modi!
 
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IT department has found over 13000 crore in one raid and thousands of crores in many other raids. If cyber crime increases, necessart steps shall be taken but let balack economy go first.
 
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