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Copyright © 2024 CGTN. 京ICP备20000184号
Disinformation report hotline: 010-85061466
/CFP
The boom in artificial intelligence (AI) will increase banks' dependence on big U.S. tech firms, creating new risks for the industry, European banking executives said.
Excitement around using AI in financial services – widely used already for detecting fraud and money-laundering – has soared since the launch of OpenAI's viral chatbot ChatGPT in late 2022 as banks examine ways to deploy generative AI.
But at a gathering of fintech executives in Amsterdam this week, some expressed concerns that the amount of computing power needed to develop AI capabilities would make banks rely even more on a small number of tech providers.
ING's chief analytics officer, Bahadir Yilmaz, who is in charge of the Dutch bank's AI work, told Reuters he expected to rely on Big Tech companies "more and more going forward" for infrastructure and machinery.
"You will always need them because sometimes the machine power that is needed for these technologies is huge. It's also not really feasible for a bank to build this tech," he said.
Banks' dependency on a small number of tech companies was "one of the biggest risks," Yilmaz said, emphasizing that European banks in particular needed to ensure they could move between different tech providers and avoid what he called "vendor lock-in."
Britain last year proposed rules to regulate financial firms' heavy reliance on external technology companies, such as Microsoft, Google, IBM and Amazon. Regulators are worried that problems at a single cloud computing company could potentially bring down services across many financial institutions.
"AI requires huge amounts of compute and really the only way that you're going to be able to access that compute (computing power) sensibly is from Big Tech," Joanne Hannaford, who leads technology strategy at Deutsche Bank's corporate bank, told an audience at the Money20/20 conference earlier this week.