Page 42 - SAMENA Trends - January 2021
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REGIONAL & MEMBERS UPDATES  SAMENA TRENDS


                                                REGIONAL NEWS





        Bahrain Among Top Countries Protecting Biometric Data


        Bahrain  is  among  the  top  five  countries  globally  for  protecting   out where biometrics are being taken, what they’re being taken
        biometric  data,  according  to  a  new  research.  Bahrain  scored   for, and how they’re being stored, while also exploring the latest
        20/31 making it the third most considered in terms of collection,   biometric  updates  amid  the  ongoing  pandemic.  There  is  huge
        storage and use of biometric data. Turkmenistan with a score of   scope for biometric data collection, so it has identified eight key
        25/31 tops the list, while China, scoring 2/31 is the worst country   areas that apply to most countries (so as to offer a fair country-
        for biometric data  collection  and use, said  the Comparitech   by-country comparison and to ensure the data is available). Each
        survey. The lower the score, the more biometric data is collected   country  has  been  scored  out  of  31,  with  low  scores  indicating
        and used. The countries that received the lowest scores overall   extensive and invasive use of biometrics and/or surveillance and
        showed a  lack  of  regard  for the  privacy  of  people’s  biometric   a high  score demonstrating  better restrictions  and regulations
        data. Through the collection, use, and storage of biometric data,   regarding  biometric  use  and  surveillance.  Then,  to  see  how
        these countries use biometrics to a severe and invasive extent,   current biometric use for Covid-19 purposes affects a country’s
        it said. From passport photos to accessing bank accounts with   score, it has deducted a point for each area biometrics have been
        fingerprints, the use of biometrics is growing at an exponential   introduced as an emergency control measure (six areas in total).
        rate. And while using your fingerprint may be easier than typing in   While China topping the list perhaps doesn’t come as too much of
        a password, just how far is too far when it comes to biometric use,   a surprise, residents of (and travelers to) other countries may be
        and what’s happening to your biometric data once it’s collected,   surprised and concerned at the extent of biometric information
        especially where  governments are  concerned?  Comparitech   that is being  collected  on  them and what is happening  to it
        updated its biometric data study to include 96 countries and found   afterward, says Comparitech study.
                                                               Key findings:
                                                               •  Many countries collect travelers’ biometric data, often through
                                                                 visas or biometric checks at airports
                                                               •  The vast  majority  of countries  use biometrics  for bank
                                                                 accounts, e.g. fingerprints to access online app data and/or to
                                                                 confirm identities within the banks themselves
                                                               •  Despite  many  countries  recognising  biometric  data  as
                                                                 sensitive, increased biometric use is widely accepted
                                                               •  Facial  recognition  CCTV  is  being  implemented  in  a  large
                                                                 number of countries or at least being tested
                                                               •  EU countries scored better overall than non-EU countries due
                                                                 to  GDPR  regulations  protecting  the  use  of  biometrics  in  the
                                                                 workplace (to some extent)
                                                               •  Many  of the top-scoring  countries  don’t  necessarily  receive
                                                                 their  high  scores  for  “best  practices”  but  because  they  are
                                                                 developing  nations that haven’t moved toward technology-
                                                                 based solutions in certain areas.




        Nepal Telecom Applies for Mobile Money License


        Nepali  Digital  Payment  Company,  a  joint   reportedly confirmed that the company has   Nepal’s telecoms regulator, the Nepal
        venture created by state-owned telecoms   implemented  all  the necessary  technical   Telecommunications  Authority  (NTA),
        provider Nepal Telecom (NT) and Rastriya   and legal infrastructure within the six-  approved  directives governing mobile
        Banijya Bank, has applied to Nepal Rastra   month timeframe agreed with the NRB in   money services early last  year, enabling
        Bank  (NRB) –  Nepal’s  central  bank  –   July 2020. The bank will now monitor the   users to  make  payments and transfers
        for a  license  to  operate  a  mobile money   system  before  granting  final  approval  for   via a digital account linked to their mobile
        service,   reports   Nepalitelecom.com.   the service, which is  expected  to begin   number.
        NT  managing  director  Dilli  Adhikari  has   operating  in  late  February  or  March.



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