Archived version

The EU is moving to exclude Meta, Apple, Google and Amazon from a new system for sharing financial data that is designed to enable development of digital finance products for consumers.

Such a decision would hand a significant boost to banks in their efforts to fight off a competitive threat from Big Tech groups, which they fear will use their data to disintermediate them from their customers while extracting much of the value of knowing people’s spending and saving behaviour.

After more than two years, negotiations on the Financial Data Access (Fida) regulation are entering the final stages in coming weeks, with Big Tech groups facing almost certain defeat, according to diplomats.

  • SorryImLate@piefed.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    7 days ago

    Uh huh. I guess that depends on your definition of the word sell. In my view, making money by sharing my ad profile is selling my data. It might not be the raw, unprocessed data, but that doesn’t matter. No EU bank would be allowed to sell third-party ads on the web to their customers based on their personal profiles.

    They also can’t “make their bank the default bank”. Unlike the digital world, the banking industry is very well established with lots of competition and money. The big banks have no motive to sell to big tech, and such a big transaction would draw a lot of attention. Anti-American sentiment is high in Europe. Does any bank really want to risk being in the headlines for allowing American tech companies in where regulators explicitly excluded them? Bank runs is how banks collapse.

    • plyth@feddit.org
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      7 days ago

      making money by sharing my ad profile is selling my data

      I agree. My point is that they will find a way to do that with the banking data in the same way that they technically don’t share the tracking data.

      The big banks have no motive to sell to big tech

      The next banking crisis will come with a struggling bank that can be bought.

      • SorryImLate@piefed.social
        link
        fedilink
        Deutsch
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        7 days ago

        The next banking crisis will come with a struggling bank that can be bought.

        I hope you’re wrong but time will tell.