Your Credit Score Should Be Based on Your Web History, IMF Says - More control taken over every inch of your life

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With more services than ever collecting your data, it’s easy to start asking why anyone should care about most of it. This is why. Because people start having ideas like this.

In a new blog post for the International Monetary Fund, four researchers presented their findings from a working paper that examines the current relationship between finance and tech as well as its potential future. Gazing into their crystal ball, the researchers see the possibility of using the data from your browsing, search, and purchase history to create a more accurate mechanism for determining the credit rating of an individual or business. They believe that this approach could result in greater lending to borrowers who would potentially be denied by traditional financial institutions.

At its heart, the paper is trying to wrestle with the dawning notion that the institutional banking system is facing a serious threat from tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Apple. The researchers identify two key areas in which this is true: Tech companies have greater access to soft-information, and messaging platforms can take the place of the physical locations that banks rely on for meeting with customers.

The concept of using your web history to inform credit ratings is framed around the notion that lenders rely on hard-data that might obscure the worthiness of a borrower or paint an unnecessarily dire picture during hard times. Citing soft-data points like “the type of browser and hardware used to access the internet, the history of online searches and purchases” that could be incorporated into evaluating a borrower, the researchers believe that when a lender has a more intimate relationship with the potential client’s history, they might be more willing to cut them some slack.

“Banks tend to cushion credit terms for their long-term customers during downturns,” the paper’s authors write. This is because they have a history and relationship with the customer. Now, imagine the kind of intimate history that Facebook could have with a borrower and suddenly its digital cash initiative starts to make more sense.


But how would all this data be incorporated into credit ratings? Machine learning, of course. It’s black boxes all the way down.

The researchers acknowledge that there will be privacy and policy concerns related to incorporating this kind of soft-data into credit analysis. And they do little to explain how this might work in practice. The paper isn’t long, and it’s worth a read just to wrap your mind around some of the notions of fintech’s future and why everyone seems to want in on the payments game.

As it is, getting the really fine soft-data points would probably require companies like Facebook and Apple to loosen up their standards on linking unencrypted information with individual accounts. How they might share information would other institutions would be its own can of worms. And while the researchers sound bullish on the advantages that tech companies have over banks, they cite business-to-business lending as a game that traditional institutions continue to dominate. “This may change, however, due to the rise of cloud computing, which may enable large technology firms to create B2B ecosystems that include large corporate customers,” they write.
 
In a new blog post for the International Monetary Fund, four researchers presented their findings from a working paper that examines the current relationship between finance and tech as well as its potential future. Gazing into their crystal ball, the researchers see the possibility of using the data from your browsing, search, and purchase history to create a more accurate mechanism for determining the credit rating of an individual or business. They believe that this approach could result in greater lending to borrowers who would potentially be denied by traditional financial institutions.
"This dissolution of privacy will be good for you" ~O'brien, probably.

Also, good luck tracking down the internet history of every person on planet Earth for the past 40 years, accurately figuring out who did what, and somehow concocting a score from it. This is so untenable it can't possibly work.
 
when a lender has a more intimate relationship with the potential client’s history, they might be more willing to cut them some slack.
Likewise, they would be even more unwilling to do business just because of their politics, which only serves to intensify radicalisation as an individual is cut off from essential services, furthering their whole 'us vs them' beliefs.
 
Uh, the reason why most traditional borrowers are denied is because they can't pay it back.

Let's be real, the most sought after customer is one that will keep making the minimum payments until the day they die (a la DSP).
They're so desperate to innovate that they'll accept any retarded idea.
 
There are already a fuckton of rules and regulations that are supposed to uphold fair lending practices and prevent discrimination, redlining, disparate impact, etc. For example:
  • Any time a bank turns down a loan applicant, they must give the basis for that turndown, and refer the applicant to the credit reporting agency they based the decision on
  • The Community Reinvestment Act is designed to ensure banks are not redlining (treating certain parts of town, if you will, as places to never lend to).
  • You have to record the races of your borrowers and report those statistics to the government
  • The Equal Credit Opportunity Act says that discrimination based on anything other than ability to repay is illegal. It explicitly says that it does NOT mean everyone is entitled to credit.
Don't let anyone bitch about these things to you; banks that violate Fair Lending rules and regulations, even unintentionally, are liable to get royally buttfucked, and thus the industry has entire sub-industry dedicated to compliance.
 
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