| The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is pushing for standardisation of all e-payment initiatives in the country to promote efficiency of the electronic payment systems in the long-run. |
| "The goal should be to allow products and services from different vendors to work together by means of inter-operable and seamless interfaces. This will allow for competition and reduce uncertainty in the market place and enhance easy acceptability," R B Barman, executive director, RBI, said at an Indian Banks' Association-Smart Cards Forum of India joint seminar on 'e-payments in retail banking'. |
| Even as the RBI is catalysing e-commerce and m-commerce, stimulating further migration of cash (bank notes and coins) to digital payment instruments, in order to increase the efficiency of payment systems, he felt that there is a need to define privacy rules since transaction trails could pose other risks to consumers. |
| While banks are increasingly developing internet banking applications for better customer service (no queues, no holidays, anytime/anywhere banking, pay electricity/ telephone/ credit card bills, insurance premium, check account status, transfer funds) and to cut operation cost, there is a critical concern on security when internet is used for business communication/ transaction. |
| "Security features need to be built into systems, application level as well as network level, with effective use of secure socket layer protocol, encryption/ decryption, digital signature, data integrity, etc," Barman said. |
| The introduction of e-payment products in India has brought a number of issues of regulatory and supervisory concern. |


