Studies show that the financial services industry is expected to benefit the most from AI, second only to Big Tech. Unsurprisingly, enormous investments are being made across the sector, from AI chatbots improving customer service to advanced models for KYC, AML, fraud detection, credit risk scoring, and insurance claim processing. Additionally, AI drives increasingly personalized services, such as investment advice, pricing, and next-best-action or product recommendations. But with this massive deployment of new technology comes a new category of risks. AI introduces unique threats, including prompt injection attacks, risks of exposing personal and confidential data, and flawed results due to hallucinations or inherent bias. This last risk "bias" is the focus of this blog. AI models are not simple rule-based systems. Most are built on complex machine learning or deep learning architectures, statistical “black boxes” made up of vast matrices of weights and parameters. This ...
In today’s hyper-connected, real-time financial landscape, ensuring End-to-End Payment Visibility is no longer a luxury, it is a regulatory, operational, and customer experience imperative. Yet many institutions still lack the tools to track a payment across its full journey, from initiation to settlement, especially when transactions pass through multiple applications, rails, and intermediaries. Traditional monitoring tools often focus on infrastructure metrics such as application uptime and server health, but they fail to answer the questions that matter most to business and operations teams: Where is my payment? Why was my payment delayed? What is the potential business impact of an anomaly? Operational silos, outdated monitoring approaches, and fragmented data continue to challenge many financial institutions, including some of the most prominent Tier 1 global banks. Payments stall, customers notice issues before operations teams do, and root causes a...