Electronic Safety and Soundness : Securing Finance in a New Age

This monograph and its technical annexes identify and discuss four key pillars that are necessary to foster a secure electronic environment and the safety and soundness of financial systems worldwide. Hence, it is intended for those formulating policies in the area of electronic security and those working with financial services providers (such as executives and management). The detailed annexes of this monograph are relevant for chief information and security officers and others who are responsible for securing network systems. First, the monograph defines electronic finance (e-finance) and electronic security (e-security) and explains why these areas require attention. Next, it presents a picture of the emerging global security industry. Then, it develops a risk management framework to assist policymakers and practitioners in understanding the tradeoffs and risks inherent in using an open network infrastructure. It also provides examples of tradeoffs that may arise with respect to technological innovations, privacy, quality of service, and security in the design of an e-security policy framework. Finally, it outlines issues in four critical and interrelated areas that require attention in the building of an adequate e-security infrastructure. These are: (i) the legal, regulatory, and enforcement framework; (ii) external monitoring of e-security practices; (iii) public-private sector cooperation; and (iv) the business case for practicing layered e-security that will improve internal monitoring.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Glaessner, Thomas C., Kellermann, Tom, McNevin, Valerie
Format: Publication biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2004-02
Subjects:ACCOUNTABILITY, BANK EXAMINERS, BANK FAILURE, BROADCASTING, COLLECTIVE ACTION, COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGIES, COMPUTER INCIDENTS, CONSOLIDATION, COPYRIGHT, CRIME, CRIMES, CRIMINALS, DEBT, DEPOSITS, DIGITAL DIVIDE, DIGITAL SIGNATURES, DOCUMENTS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC INCENTIVES, ELECTRONIC BANKING, ELECTRONIC COMMERCE, ELECTRONIC SERVICES, ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS, EMERGING MARKETS, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL SERVICES, FINANCIAL SYSTEMS, FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS, FRAUD, GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION, INFORMATION SHARING, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, INSTANT MESSAGING, INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS, INSURANCE, INTERNET CONNECTIVITY, INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, LAWS, LEGAL FRAMEWORK, LEGISLATION, LIABILITY, LICENSING, MONEY LAUNDERING, NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE, NETWORKS, NUCLEAR POWER, ONLINE BANKING, PAYMENT SYSTEMS, PENALTIES, POLICY IMPLICATIONS, PROTOCOLS, PUBLIC AGENCIES, PUBLIC POLICY, REGULATORY BURDEN, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, RISK MANAGEMENT, SAVINGS, SECURITY INFORMATION, SECURITY OFFICERS, SECURITY RISKS, SECURITY STANDARDS, SECURITY SYSTEMS, SYSTEMIC RISK, TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE, TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION, THREATS, TRANSACTION COSTS, TREASURY OPERATIONS, VIDEO CONFERENCE FACILITIES POLICY FRAMEWORK, MONITORING, SECURITY MANAGEMENT, POLICIES, STANDARDS, PROCEDURES, RISK MANAGEMENT POLICIES, COUNTRY CASE STUDIES, MONEY TRANSFERS, ELECTRONIC SECURITY ARCHITECTURE, MONOGRAPHS, PRIVATE SECTOR, PUBLIC SECTOR, GOVERNANCE, SUPERVISION, EDUCATION ACTIVITY, INSURANCE POLICIES, TECHNOLOGY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/02/3108998/electronic-safety-soundness-securing-finance-new-age
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15029
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