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"Banking as a service" stack based on the cloud stack by Scholten, derived from Lenk et al. UML class diagram depicting banking Banking as a service (BaaS) is the provision of banking products (such as current accounts and credit cards) to non-bank third parties through APIs.
"X as a service" (rendered as *aaS in acronyms) is a phrasal template for any business model in which a product use is offered as a subscription-based service rather than as an artifact owned and maintained by the customer. Originating from the software as a service concept that appeared in the 2010s with the advent of cloud computing, [1] [2] the template has expanded to numerous offerings in t
Payments as a service (PaaS) is a marketing phrase used to describe software as a service to connect a group of international payment systems.The architecture is represented by a layer – or overlay – that resides on top of these disparate systems and provides for two-way communications between the payment system and the PaaS.
Virtual banking first became a possibility in 1996 with the Bank of Montreal's mbanx. mbanx was released at the very beginning of the internet banking revolution in Canada and was the first full-service online bank [26] Also in 1996, RBC started providing banking information online and had the first personal computer banking software released ...
During the 2010s, open banking was also linked to shifts in attitudes towards the issue of data ownership, illustrated by regulations such as GDPR and the open data movement. [citation needed] With open banking, banks turn into financial service platforms, technically implemented through a banking as a service concept. [6]
Unlike Switzerland and the United Kingdom (where regulatory authority over the banking, securities and insurance industries is combined into one single financial service agency), the U.S. maintains separate securities, commodities, and insurance regulatory agencies—separate from the bank regulatory agencies—at the federal and state levels. [7]
Digital banking is part of the broader context for the move to online banking, where banking services are delivered over the internet. The shift from traditional to digital banking has been gradual, remains ongoing, and is constituted by differing degrees of banking service digitization.
The banking environment consists of many legacy systems that have, over the years, grown in complexity and become increasingly inflexible. [6] BIAN is defining a common framework as a base for a shared service-oriented catalogue for the banking industry with the goal of establishing a common language.