How can Fintech navigate the world of regulation and compliance?
BBVA's Fintech University in San Francisco addressed regulation and compliance in one of its panels with important experts.
BBVA's Fintech University in San Francisco addressed regulation and compliance in one of its panels with important experts.
APIs demonstrate every day to be useful in many and varied sectors, including human resources, as they can help job seekers as well as companies requiring the services of professionals.
When choosing the type of API that best suits their needs, developers find in the REST architecture one of their best allies: its many advantages have been demonstrated through all sorts of success stories.
Over 200 attendees and more than 25 speakers enjoyed the one-day conference in San Francisco, a region with a thriving ecosystem of fintech startups.
One of the aims for PayStats API, from BBVA, is to provide information to third parties, which can then develop quality apps and services to offer added value to end customers. Juan Murillo, Head of Urban Analysis at BBVA Data&Analytics, explains how it works and its particularities.
The legal texts that accompany the APIs are often complex and incomprehensible to most mortals. However, you can already see some changes in the terms and conditions of companies like Google.
Companies such as Microsoft are supporting the sectors they wish to center their business on. According to Satya Nadella, Microsoft's CEO, the next boom in technology will be chatbots.
Determining the limitations of the infrastructure and bringing the API code to the last stage of refinement may be essential actions for a tool not to be knocked down by attacks or by its own popularity.
The manner of ordering the information, contents, examples and even the language used in the explanations is of importance when it comes to facilitating work for developers. A well-structured documentation makes the process of learning about the new environment easier for them.
Instant messaging applications such as Telegram, Facebook Messenger or Slack all contain bots, that is, automated virtual assistants with which one can talk in order to request services – such as asking for a taxi, or purchasing a plane ticket – or organising a meeting in one’s company.