The Internet has extended the hours for banking from 9-4 to 24/7.
From almost any computer with a Web connection, one can access a
bank account, apply for a loan or invest in the future. Banking
on the Internet has also drawn the attention of regulators. To support
the industry and protect customers, government agencies are establishing
regulations and standards for online financial services.
For many services, meeting new regulations will be tough, as they
have committed themselves to hard-coded Web applications that are
difficult to upgrade and maintain. As regulations are introduced,
they will have to pull systems offline to refit them.
ILOG software components bypass this problem. They impart an open
architecture that supports change. Services using our products do
not have to worry about going offline to accommodate new regulations.
Already several leading financial services rely on applications
built with ILOG components. They know that we build the future into
our products to help ensure theirs.
Online Financial Services
The need for order and security is driving governments to establish
codes to regulate and standardize online financial services.
The Internet has become a convenient place to bank. Increasingly
more financial operations, including moneylenders and investment
houses, are providing Web-based services to keep or attract customers.
The boom has produced a vast array of services varying not only
in appearance and products, but also in terminology, data processing
and financial practices.
The European Commission plans to establish regulations and standards
for the services by 2005, in order to bring to the Internet the
quality of service customers receive from brick-and-mortar operations.
The EC is not alone in its effort. As Orson Swindle, commissioner
of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, pointed out in his talk, "E-Commerce:
The Future of Banking and Financial Services," at Suffolk University
Law School, Boston: "There is a very strong political interest in
Washington, within the Congress and the FTC to increase the nature
and extent of federal regulation of e-commerce."
Code conformity
For many online financial services, staying abreast of regulations
and standards will be a very complex and expensive task. With each
new government-mandated change, they will have to revise the code
of their Web-based applications. For some, this may involve taking
applications completely offline, effectively going out of business
temporarily. A few days offline, however, can be long enough to
undo a company.
Fortunately with ILOG's advanced products, updating an online application
is an easy task. ILOG software components impart an open architecture
that allows users to upgrade a running system without taking it
offline. They are able to do this by externalizing the logic, leaving
the core code untouched. The user changes the logic externally,
and then employs an application programming interface to integrate
the changes with the running system. ILOG JRules and ILOG JConfigurator
take code revision even a step further, by placing it in the hands
of nontechnical personnel. Code revision typically requires the
intervention of a software developer. ILOG JRules and ILOG JConfigurator
- ILOG's Java components for business rule programming and optimized
product configuration, respectively - come with a "natural language"
editor that allows employees responsible for implementing policy
to use a familiar lexicon in directly changing the logic of a running
system.
ILOG software already supports XML, the emerging standard for data
exchange. ILOG and Wall Street & Technology recently conducted
a survey that showed that 53 percent of those contacted considered
XML critical to their business strategies. ILOG JRules works directly
with XML, without a converter, and ILOG JViews supports scalable
vector graphics for exchanging XML graphics via the Web.
Web services
Further benefiting the industry will be the large-scale introduction
of Web services. Accessible through standard Internet protocols,
a typical Web service performs one task and is combined with other
services to form an application.
Web services have the advantage of being loosely linked, so they
can be shared by widely distributed online applications. When a
new regulation is introduced, potentially hundreds of applications
can be updated centrally through changes to a shared Web service.
Subscribers to the service need not worry about changing their applications
directly.
Ready for the future
First Union, Visa International and Sony Bank are just three of
many providers of online financial services that can quickly adopt
new regulations and standards because they use ILOG software components.
Moreover, they are readily able to provide new services to satisfy
customer demand. Whatever the future has in store for them, they
are ready with ILOG.
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