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Businesses Software

Connecting Your Bank Account To an App is Now a $3-Billion Business (latimes.com) 55

When you link your checking account to Venmo or use it to buy bitcoin, a startup called Plaid is likely facilitating the connection with your bank. You punch in your user name and password; Plaid checks those credentials with the financial institution and, if they're accurate, passes banking information back to the app. That's it. From a report: This kind of software has been around for decades. But in the last year, Plaid has captured investors' attention. The San Francisco startup was the subject of a bidding war among venture capitalists and at least one tech company, ultimately resulting in a $250-million investment last month. That money will partly go toward the acquisition of one of its biggest competitors. Plaid announced Tuesday it was buying New York-based Quovo Inc. The deal could be worth about $200 million after performance bonuses, said three people familiar with the transaction, who asked not to be identified because terms of the deal were private.

Since starting Plaid in 2012, Zach Perret has sold the startup's nine lines of code to some of the most popular finance apps. Robo-advisor startup Betterment, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase Inc., PayPal Holdings Inc.'s Venmo and stock-trading app Robinhood Markets Inc. have all used Plaid. Meanwhile, Quovo specializes in wealth management and brokerages. "This represents the merging of two complementary but both very important businesses," said Perret, Plaid's chief executive. Plaid is now valued at roughly $3 billion.

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Connecting Your Bank Account To an App is Now a $3-Billion Business

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  • Paypal is enough (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DarkRookie2 ( 5551422 ) on Tuesday January 08, 2019 @04:50PM (#57926748)
    Its the only thing that is link to my bank account. It can stay that way.
  • by jrumney ( 197329 ) on Tuesday January 08, 2019 @05:00PM (#57926810)

    You punch in your user name and password; Plaid checks those credentials with the financial institution and, if they're accurate, passes banking information back to the app.

    I know there is a big dark market for these things, but a $3 billion valuation for a MITM exploit still seems a bit steep to me.

  • even if your app access gets hacked and your money is stolen it's the same as investing in bitcoin

    no downside

  • You mean to tell me people give third parties access to their bank accounts? Wow, that's dumber than using Facebook.
    • by torkus ( 1133985 )

      You do that every time you hand someone a check too. Routing and account number? Yep, right on there along with your name and address too. On every check. Ever. Forever...unless you change accounts that check from a 20 years ago has enough info to access your bank account funds.

      So when you're done fear mongering, look at the broader picture for 2 seconds.

      • That's not a direct comparison. If someone forges a check I call the bank and have the checks cancelled. If someone malicious gets your bank account password there is no telling what they could do, or if you would even find out about it right away.
  • I assume the figure in the title is the amount that has gone "missing." Link my checking account to buy bitcoin? Sure. Extended warranty? Absolutely. I won the lottery and just need to send you $3000 to collect my millions? Where do I sign up.

  • You do what?! (Score:5, Informative)

    by zdzichu ( 100333 ) on Wednesday January 09, 2019 @01:47AM (#57929150) Homepage Journal

    You give your credentials to some third party and it tries them? Like, you break your contract with the bank and forgo all your rights to complain on fraudalent charges? Check the ToS of you bank – all of them make sharing your credentials a "game over" situation for account owner.
    Almost every single bank provide and API for external parties to initiate payments (in this situation authorisation is processed by Bank). Pay-by-link is standard in all banks, and OpenAPI (PSD2) will force rest of them to comply.
    But if you share you credentials, you are lost.

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