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Your banking information was once off-limits to tech companies. Now they’re seeking it

Facebook said this week that it had proposed data-sharing partnerships with banks and credit card companies.
(Lionel Bonaventure / AFP/Getty Images)
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The Washington Post

Facebook Inc.’s push to gain access to users’ banking data and other sensitive financial information could help make online banking more efficient — or it could backfire among those skeptical that the world’s biggest social network can reliably safeguard personal data.

The site has joined a growing race among big technology companies seeking private information once regarded as off-limits: users’ checking-account balances, recent credit card transactions and other facts of their personal finances and everyday lives.

Facebook said this week that it had proposed data-sharing partnerships with banks and credit card companies that would enable users to access their personal account information from within the social network’s messaging service, Facebook Messenger, as an alternative to speaking with customer service representatives or automated chat bots on the companies’ banking or credit sites.

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Facebook said the data would not be shared with marketers or used for ad-targeting purposes, and no major U.S. financial institutions have announced that they’re interested in a joint arrangement. But a company representative said several unnamed banks and credit card companies have voiced interest in teaming up with the social network, even proposing their own potential deals.

“The idea is that messaging with a bank can be better than waiting on hold over the phone — and it’s completely opt-in,” Facebook spokeswoman Elisabeth Diana said. “We’re not using this information beyond enabling these types of experiences — not for advertising or anything else. A critical part of these partnerships is keeping people’s information safe and secure.”

But Facebook’s past scandals over data privacy have left industry and privacy experts wondering how the more than 1 billion Facebook Messenger users might react to the company wanting to link their social media profiles with their private finances and spending histories. Facebook said the banking information wouldn’t be included in the vast stores of information the site uses to build people’s personality profiles.

“It’s the most intimate information about our personal behavior possible, perhaps even more intimate than how we comment on our friends’ feeds,” said Zachary Townsend, the former chief data officer for the state of California and a partner at Deciens Capital, a venture capital fund that specializes in financial technology. “The idea that Facebook, which basically aggregates information to sell to third parties, could also add financial information to that mix seems uncomfortable, given their history.”

Many of the tech world’s major players have shown similar ambitions in tapping users’ financial data, which could help companies lock in customer loyalty, help developers provide more sophisticated tools — and give advertisers lucrative clues into users’ offline interests and buying intentions.

Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google provide mobile-payment services that enable users to access financial information and pay for products with their phones. Amazon.com Inc. — whose founder, Jeff Bezos, owns the Washington Post — offers users a credit card issued by JPMorgan Chase. And last year, Google announced a deal that would let it review and analyze roughly 70% of all credit and debit card transactions in the United States.

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“What you purchase is the ultimate predictor of what you’ll purchase in the future. It’s an indication of your stage of life, and there’s a lot that can be packaged up and targeted based off that,” said Mike Herrick, an executive at Urban Airship, which works with companies on digital wallets and mobile engagement. “Everybody’s mad at Facebook, but they’re just one of many participants in this data ecosystem.”

Facebook’s pitch to the financial world — first reported by the Wall Street Journal — comes months after the social media giant was found to have allowed political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica to improperly access the data of 87 million people. The episode turned Facebook into a poster child for tech privacy abuses, sparking public outrage, congressional hearings and mounting concerns over how much the site knew and shared about its global audience.

Representatives from major banks said they talked often with Facebook about possible deals, and banks and credit card companies routinely advertise on the social network in hopes of reaching new customers for checking accounts or credit cards. But they also said they were stepping lightly because of possible customer concerns about data security and privacy.

A Citigroup spokesman said, “While we regularly have conversations about potential partnerships, safeguarding the security and privacy of our customers’ data and providing customer choice are paramount in everything we do.”

A U.S. Bank spokesman said his bank “has not shared any customer data or information with Facebook or any other platforms.” A JPMorgan Chase spokesman said his company isn’t “sharing our customers’ off-platform transaction data with these platforms, and have had to say no to some things as a result.” Wells Fargo said it is “not actively engaged in data-sharing conversations with Facebook.”

Facebook already has smaller agreements with financial institutions, including PayPal and American Express, that enable users to do things such as review transaction receipts on Facebook Messenger. In March, Facebook launched a service that would enable Citibank customers in Singapore to ask a Messenger chat bot for their account balance, their recent transactions and credit card rewards.

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While some parts of the financial system are heavily regulated, there are few rules about the transaction of account and spending histories, giving the companies wide leverage in how they use and share the data, Deciens Capital’s Townsend said.

But financial institutions remain largely split over how much of their customers’ data they’re willing to share. “Banks are trying to be more like tech companies, and some tech companies are trying to be more like banks,” Townsend said.

Harwell writes for the Washington Post.

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