India found cybersecurity lapses at National Payments Corp in 2019, according to government document


A shopkeeper swipes a customer’s debit card with the logo of RuPay at an electronics goods store in Kolkata. The March 2019 government document cited the storing of 16-digit card numbers and other personal information such as customer names, account numbers and national identity numbers in ‘plain text’ in some databases, leaving the data unprotected if the system was breached. — Reuters

NEW DELHI: A government audit of India’s flagship payments processor last year found more than 40 security vulnerabilities including several it called “critical” and “high” risk, according to an internal government document seen by Reuters.

The audit, which took place over four months to February 2019, highlighted a lack of encryption of personal data at the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) which forms the backbone of the country’s digital payments system and operates the RuPay card network championed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

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