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Invite colleaguesExplainability and operational resilience in the design of central bank digital currencies: A new generation of money-laundering deterrence software
Abstract
It has been argued that technologies such as blockchain could provide financial systems and societies with a better infrastructural solution to process information and identify illegal transactions. Building on this idea, this paper argues that if payment systems are to take advantage of the properties that define distributed ledger technologies, they must build on those models that have delivered improved trust in our economies. Accordingly, the model presented in this paper is based on a universal digital ID that could be interoperable among different jurisdictions. Such a digital ID would rely on an explainable framework structured around an understanding of the role played by central banks, intellectual property rights and personal data protection in the processing of information. Understanding the interaction between these elements may be the first step towards a better understanding of the infrastructures employed to tackle illegal activities, which could in turn contribute to the successful development of the standards on which the next generation of suspicious transaction or order reports will be based.
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Author's Biography
Israel Cedillo Lazcano is Professor of Banking and IP/IT Law, and Director of Research and Graduate Studies at Universidad de las Américas Puebla. He obtained his PhD in law from the University of Edinburgh in 2021. He has worked as an intellectual property and personal data protection adviser, and has been awarded various research prizes, including the First Prize of the Fifth Edition of the Competition of Legal Monographs for Lawyers under 35 years old in 2013, sponsored by FELABAN.