Consumer finance group seeks more privacy in digital euro use

Date:

A sculpture with Euro symbol is pictured in front of the European Parliament in Brussels

A sculpture of Euro symbol is pictured in front of the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium, May 2, 2018. REUTERS/Francois Lenoir/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

LONDON, Oct 3 (Reuters) – Tougher privacy safeguards are needed for using a digital euro online, consumer lobby Finance Watch said on Tuesday, in the latest sign of mounting “Big Brother” concerns policymakers are having to confront.

The European Central Bank is due this month to say if it will push ahead with a digital euro, one of many central banks across the world, including the Federal Reserve and Bank of England, seeking to keep ahead of technological advances in payments.

The European Union’s executive European Commission has proposed a draft law that would give legal underpinning to a digital euro, but critics worry it will lack the anonymity of using cash and supplant cash.

Finance Watch said in a policy paper on Tuesday that a digital euro, protected by adequate privacy and data protection measures, could reduce the dependency of European citizens on a small number of dominant payment firms and Big Tech platform operators, and prevent further market concentration.

Finance Watch said it accepted that some concessions would have to be made to ensure a digital euro is not used for money-laundering, making full, cash-like anonymity of digital payments difficult to achieve.

Nevertheless, as drafted, the proposed EU law gives higher levels of privacy to offline use of a digital euro stored in a customers “wallet”, Finance Watch said.

“While the proposed approach to offline transactions goes a long way towards offering cash-like privacy, a higher level of privacy and data protection should also be applied to small, low-value online transactions,” Finance Watch said.

EU financial services chief Mairead McGuinness said last month that the draft law, now being approved by EU states and the European Parliament, should not be rushed.

The Bank of England has said a “national conversation” is needed to assuage public fears that a digital version of the pound would allow government to spy on people.

Reporting by Huw Jones
Editing by Mark Potter

私たちの行動規範:トムソン・ロイター「信頼の原則」

Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

Interest rate cut hopes raised by slowing wage growth

.Expectations that UK interest rates will be cut in...

Google turns to nuclear to power AI data centres

Google has signed a deal to use small nuclear...

CyberCharge Launches Telegram MINI APP: Expanding Decentralized Energy and Consumer Networks​

CyberCharge, a blockchain-driven energy platform, today announced the launch...

Wannalooks announced the seamless integration with the influencer network WannaClub

Wilmington, Delaware, –Recently, Wannalooks officially announced   its seamless integration with WannaClub,...