(LendItFintech News) - In light of concerns that open banking is too open with user data, Plaid announced a new privacy portal that lets US users view where their data is going.
Users can see what apps are sharing data and switch apps with the click of a button, and after a $58-million class-action privacy settlement last week, many are expected to.
“It’s difficult for anyone to keep track of where their data is going when they’re using so many apps to manage their finances,” Jean-Denis Greze, CTO of Plaid, said in a Tweet. “Very proud of launching the Plaid Portal to give people easy controls across the entire fintech ecosystem.”
The firm is calling it the Plaid Portal and not explicitly tying the launch with a privacy settlement the firm reached on Friday, but the timing is close enough to call.
Dubbed as a win for Data Privacy Week, it is one of the first platforms they have offered outside of logins within other financial service apps. Over the summer, the platform went live in beta mode and fully launched on Tuesday.
Plaids login landing page and the banking data it collects behind the scenes help users connect with over 5,500 services like Coinbase, but the open banking ideal has come under scrutiny.
Plaid settles privacy suit
A recently settled class action on Friday granted $58 million toward users of Plaid for allegedly mishandling data and disguising a login screen as a trusted banking service.
The settlement alleges that when connecting an account to providers like Coinbase, Plaid brought up a web page that let users search for their bank, for example, Bank of America.
As Sean Byrne, the Head of Computer Security at Truework, pointed out in a Twitter post from 2020, looks can be deceiving. The BoA logo would appear at the top of the screen, and according to the lawsuit, users would trust the page as an extension of their bank and give Plaid their bank password.
In reality, Plaid collects and stores user accounts and passwords and nearly all the information users have in their accounts, including loans and debt.
Plaid could have some of the most accurate credit scoring data globally if they shared user data or sold it off, which they claim not to do, as a matter of course. Rumor of a lawsuit first appeared in 2020.
In related news, Plaid announced last week it would buy an ID varifying application called Cognito for a cool $250 million.
Any user of a Plaid service that connected bank data through services like Robinhood, Coinbase, Venmo since 2013 has a stake in the claim, and no proof of purchase is necessary.
Though, as some have already pointed out, the individual payouts may be as low as a couple of bucks when an estimated 98 million people who use nearly every financial app have an option to file.
$38 million to be distributed
According to the suit, the lawyers that argued the case will likely receive: “up to $14.5 million in attorneys’ fees, plus additional costs and service awards. This would leave approximately $38 million to be distributed to the Class Members.”
Plaid said it is committed to building a safer fintech ecosystem in a blog post and celebrates the National Cybersecurity Alliance’ Data Privacy Week with its new web page.
People can first set up a Plaid Portal account by visiting my.plaid.com to view account connections and control which apps have access.
Plaid also made sure to mention the sheer size of their operation, deemed too big to merge with behemoth Visa last year, shuttering a $5.3 billion plan to merge by reminding everyone.
“With nearly 9 in 10 Americans today using some form of fintech to manage their financial lives, powering a safer digital financial ecosystem is a paramount priority and one we are excited to continue to support.”
Plaid is valued at around $13 billion today.
By Kevin Travers · Fintech