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Regulation for E-payment Systems: Analytical Approaches Beyond Private Ordering

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2018

Adekemi Omotubora*
Affiliation:
University of Lagos
Subhajit Basu*
Affiliation:
University of Leeds

Abstract

Technology-driven payment instruments and services are facilitating the development of e-commerce; however, security concerns beleaguer their implementation, particularly in developing countries. This article considers the limits of private ordering in the regulation of e-payment systems. It uses Nigeria to exemplify a developing country that is increasingly pushing for the adoption of a regulatory framework for e-payment systems based on private ordering. It argues that, although technical standards and self-regulation by the financial industry are important, law is an essential regulatory mechanism that is largely absent. The article proposes that law be used as a mechanism to set and compel compliance with technical and industry standards, thus building trust, catering to public interest concerns and legitimizing the regulatory process.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © SOAS, University of London 2018 

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Footnotes

*

Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of Lagos.

**

Associate professor, School of Law, University of Leeds.

The authors wish to thank Professors Joan Loughrey, Clive Walker, David O'Mahony, Jean Allain and Philip Leith and anonymous referees who made helpful comments on an earlier draft of this article.

References

1 See European Commission “Towards an integrated European market for card, internet and mobile payments” (COM 941 2011), para 2.3.

2 European Central Bank “The payment system” (2010), available at: <https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/pdf/other/paymentsystem201009en.pdf> (last accessed 12 February 2018); see also Ofcom “Innovation in UK consumer electronic payments: A collaborative study by Ofcom and the Payment Systems Regulator” (2014), available at: <https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0014/45041/e-payments.pdf> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

3 Other countries, particularly in Africa, are also involved in this drive. For example: Kenya's M-pesa is the largest market for mobile money; South Africa has the most developed e-payment systems in Africa; and Ghana and Tanzania are pushing for wider adoption of e-payment systems. See KPMG “Payment developments in Africa” (vol 1, 2015), available at: <https://assets.kpmg.com/content/dam/kpmg/za/pdf/2016/09/Payment-Developments-in-Africa-2015.pdf> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

4 These include “National payment systems vision (NPSV) 2020” developed by the federal government; and the Central Bank of Nigeria's “Cashless Nigeria” policy.

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6 PCIDSS is a proprietary information security standard for organizations that handle branded credit cards from the major card companies including Visa, MasterCard and American Express. For more information, see: <https://www.pcisecuritystandards.org/pci_security/> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

7 The concept of public interest is discussed in the next section.

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11 Ibid.

12 They have also been defined more broadly to include rules originated by the private sector but put in place by sovereign governments, as well as rules put in place by private actors following government delegation. However, a critical reading of the literature suggests that these more aptly describe self-regulation generally and could refer to other models of regulation such as co-regulation and meta-regulation. See S Schwarcz “Private ordering” (2002–03) North West University Law Review 319 at 324; see also C Coglianese and E Mendelson “Meta-regulation and self-regulation” (Penn Law School public law and legal theory research paper no 12-11) 1 at 6–9.

13 Schwarcz, ibid.

14 PCI Security Standards Council “PCI security”, available at: <https://www.pcisecuritystandards.org/pci_security/> (last accessed 3 March 2018).

15 Ibid.

16 Ibid.

17 Schwarcz “Private ordering”, above at note 12 at 319.

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39 Id at 58.

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41 Ibid.

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46 For example, the CBN had directed Nigerian banks to charge processing fees on all cash transactions but not for e-payments; see CBN letter titled “Industry policy on retail cash collection and lodgement” (IITP/C/01 circular BPS/DIR/GEN/CIR/01/003, 16 March 2012) (copy on file with the authors).

47 For example, ATM fraud constituted the leading consumer complaint to the CBN between 2010 and 2012, as a result of which the CBN directed the system to migrate from basic “chip and PIN” to EMV cards (cards using the global standard for chip-based debit and credit card transactions, developed by Europay, MasterCard and Visa). See Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation “Annual report and statement of account” (2010, 2011 and 2012), available at: <http://ndic.gov.ng/publications/> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

48 Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF) “Annual report 2012” (copy on file with authors). It is not clear whether the report was subsequently published or otherwise made publicly available.

49 See CBN “Payments system vision 2020” (release 2.0, September 2013).

50 See generally Electronic Banking Regulations 2003; Revised Guidelines on Stored Value / Pre-Paid Card Issuance and Operation 2012; Standards and Guidelines on Automated Teller Machines (ATM) Operations in Nigeria 2010; Regulatory Framework on Mobile Payment Services in Nigeria 2014; and the Electronic Banking Regulations 2003.

51 POS Guidelines, item 3.1.

52 E-banking Guidelines, item 1.5.2 (emphasis added).

53 POS Guidelines, item 3.1.

54 See Nigerian Identity Management Commission Act 2007, secs 27, 28 and 29.

55 See Revised Guidelines on Stored Value / Pre-Paid Card Issuance and Operation 2012.

56 See further at note 65 and sections on “Private ordering and the index for strong regulation” and “How law regulates: Lessig's modalities of regulation in cyberspace and the regulation of e-payments” below.

57 Obodoeze, FC et al. “Enhanced modified security framework for Nigeria cashless e-payment system” (2012) 3/11 International Journal of Computer and Science Applications 189 at 189Google Scholar.

58 Ibid.

59 Id at 189–90.

60 See Security Standards Council “Securing the future of payments together”, available at: <https://www.pcisecuritystandards.org/> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

61 Ibid.

62 Morse, EA and Raval, VPCI DSS: Payment card industry data security standards in context” (2008) 24 Computer Law and Security Report 540 at 553CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

63 Id at 551.

64 AS Rosenberg “Better than cash? Global proliferation of debit and prepaid cards and consumer protection policy” (2005, Berkeley University Press (Bepress) Legal Series paper 766).

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67 Cases from England are particularly relevant here because they constitute persuasive authorities in Nigerian courts, as Nigeria was a British colony and operates a common law system.

68 Case no 7BQ00307 (30 April 2009) in Kelman, ACase judgement: England and Wales” (2009) 6 Digital Evidence and Electronic Signature Law Review 235Google Scholar.

69 Id at 238.

70 Clerkenwell and Shoreditch County Court case no 1YE003643 (24 October 2012) in Mason, S and Bohm, NCommentary on case on appeal: England and Wales” (2013) 10 Digital Evidence and Electronic Signature Law Review 175Google Scholar.

71 Id at 185.

72 Id at 187.

73 See Evidence Act (Nigeria) 2011, secs 93–97.

74 Emphasis added.

75 See, for example, Regulations on Electronic Identification and Trust Services for Electronic Transactions in the Internal Market (910/2014/EU), in particular regs 3, 13, 25, 26 and 32.

76 See Kanade, SG, Petrovska-Delacretaz, D and Dorizzi, B Enhancing Information Security and Privacy by Combining Biometrics with Cryptography (2012, Morgan and Claypool)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

77 See CBN “Letter to all other financial institutions (OFIs): Bank verification number (BVN) enrolment for customers” (ref OFI/DIR/CIR/GEN/17/139, 21 April 2017), available at <https://www.cbn.gov.ng/Out/2017/OFISD/CIRCULARONBVNOFOFIs0001(3).pdf> (last accessed 4 March 2018).

78 Meadows, ADSpoof and vulnerability of biometric systems” in Du, EY (ed) Biometrics from Fiction to Practice (2013, Pan Stanford Publishing) 188 at 195Google Scholar.

79 This would be a general or omnibus data protection law modelled on EU data protection law. Although detailed discussion of the problems with the EU law is beyond the scope of this article, it is important to note that a proposal to adopt the EU approach does not suggest that a Nigerian law on data protection should replicate the exact provisions of EU law, particularly because of its broad and rather nebulous definition of personal data.

80 See generally Akerlof, GThe market for ‘lemons’: Quality uncertainty and the market mechanism” (1970) 84/3 The Quarterly Journal of Economics 488CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Schreft, SLRisks of identity theft: Can the market protect the payment system?” (2007) Fourth Quarterly Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Review 5Google Scholar.

81 Schreft, id at 23.

82 See the definition of public goods, above at note 40.

83 Schreft “Risks of identity theft”, above at note 80 at 22–28.

84 NeFF “Annual report 2012”, above at note 48.

85 Letter dated 6 July 2012 from CBN to all deposit money banks, ref CFP/DIR/GDL/01/018 (copy on file with the authors).

86 SJ Mudorch and R Anderson “Security protocols and evidence: Where many payment systems fail” (pre-proceeding draft for the Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security, Barbados, 3–7 March 2014), available at: <http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~sjm217/papers/fc14evidence.pdf> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

87 CBN “About Nigerian Electronic Fraud Forum”, available at: <http://www.cenbank.org/neff/about.asp> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

88 See for example, Payment Services Regulations 2009 SI 2009/209 (UK), part 5.

89 See Cornes, R and Sandler, T The Theory of Externalities, Public Goods and Club Goods (2nd ed, 1996, Cambridge University Press) at 39CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

90 Schreft “Risks of identity theft”, above at note 80 at 5.

91 CBN Guidelines on Electronic Banking 2003, item 3.0(g).

92 CBN “E-payment dispute arbitration framework” (proposed, 2013), item 3, available at: <https://www.cbn.gov.ng/out/2013/ccd/e-payment%20dispute%20arbitration%20framework.pdf> (last accessed 12 February 2018).

93 Payment Services Regs, above at note 88, regs 60(3) and 57(2).

94 Id, regs 60(1)–(3).

95 Mason, SElectronic banking and how courts approach the evidence” (2013) 29/2 Computer Law and Security Review 144 at 144Google Scholar.

96 See Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention etc) Act 2015.

97 This prototype was given to the authors by law enforcement agents and forms part of the data used by one of the authors in broader research into the challenges of implementing cybersecurity in Nigeria.

98 Ibid.

99 For example, rights to privacy and to freedom from discrimination, harassment and intimidation are guaranteed under the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended), chap IV, sec 28(1)(a)–(h).

100 NeFF “Annual report 2012”, above at note 48.

101 See CBN “Submission of fraud report on e-channels using a common portal for the payment industry” (CBN circular BPS/DIR/CIR/GEN/02/103, 2 July 2013).

102 See generally CBN “About Nigerian Electronic Fraud Forum”, above at note 87.

103 POS Guidelines, item 3.1.

104 For example, statistics are disputed regarding PCIDSS compliance levels. As at 2011, only two of the potential target organizations were reported to be PCIDSS compliant. Contested reports also put the level of compliance at 2% in 2012 and up to 50% in 2013, although there are no reports on ongoing compliance checks or the present state of PCIDSS compliance in Nigeria.

105 Morse and Raval “PCI DSS”, above at note 62 at 551.

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108 Goldsmith, id at 1201.

109 Lessig Code Version 2.0, above at note 65.

110 Id at 123–25.

111 Id at 340–41.

112 Ibid.

113 Id at 342.

114 Ibid.

115 Id at 341.

116 Id at 5.

117 L Lessig “The law of the horse: What cyberlaw might teach” (1999) 113/2 Harvard Law Review 501 at 514.

118 Id at 511.

119 Id at 502.

120 See previous arguments at notes 9–18 above.

121 The use of the terms “technology” and “industry” is for consistency as they essentially align with Lessig's concept of code and market.

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125 Ibid.

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137 Jaap-Koops “Criteria for normative technology”, above at note 134 at 159.

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140 See C Coglianese and E Mendelson “Meta-regulation and self-regulation” (Penn Law School public law and legal theory research paper no 12–11) at 16.

141 See above at note 3.