Personal Finance & Money Asked on March 26, 2021
I recently signed up for Up bank.
The process went like this:
That’s it, you now have an account you deposit money into and they’re sending a card in the mail.
I’m curious how this fits Australian KYC laws. This seems easy to abuse – for example lists of stolen driver’s license numbers could be used to create bank accounts. (Admittedly – using a phone number is a second part of KYC as getting an Australian phone number requires an in person ID check).
According to their own website:
Up is designed, developed and delivered through a collaboration between Ferocia Pty Ltd ABN 67 152 963 712 ("Ferocia") and Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Limited ABN 11 068 049 178
So the Adelaide Bank Limited is the bank behind the "UP" brand. It's a digital bank like many others. I'm pretty sure that your concerns about security is somehow regulated by the Australia government and also by internal process using modern algorithims with Artificial Inteligence and etc.
Answered by Croves on March 26, 2021
We can't tell their exact policy but. Most banks have a tiered or stepped underwriting process.
Example:
and on and on.
There is a trade-off to easy onboarding and security, and this is the modern way to manage this.
Answered by Chris Evans on March 26, 2021
It's done with a electronic instant DVS Check, a credit ping (not a full check) and safe harbour
If you used a stolen driver's license you could theoretically sign up (provided its not been reported stolen) but you would be committing identity fraud and it is possible to solve but its a nightmare for the victim.
Answered by Akshat on March 26, 2021
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