
The Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (Austrac) is trialing a prototype for the automation of funds transfer instructions, business tech site ZDNet on Feb. 24.
Austrac — a government financial intelligence agency — is reportedly partnering with the Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne to trial the use of and technology to help multiple actors automate their international fund transfer instructions (IFTIs) reporting to Austrac. Reporting entities include , remitters and casinos, according to ZDNet.
Work on the proof-of-concept () for IFTI reporting automation began in December 2018, an unnamed spokesman told ZDNet.
The article also covers Swinburne’s recently-launched Center of Excellence, which opened last month in partnership with Paris-headquartered multinational consultancy firm Capgemini.
The Center, based at the university’s Hawthorn campus in Melbourne, will focus on fostering industry fluency in the implementation of technologies, platforms, assets and systems. Drawing on input from Swinburne’s existing Innovation Lab, the center will work with Capgemini to jointly develop solutions from PoC to production.
Aleksandar Subic, deputy vice-chancellor of research and development at Swinburne, told ZDNet:
“We see this technology as the key digital innovation platform supporting global supply chains, intellectual property, and trade across a range of industry sectors in the future.”
According to ZDNet, Swinburne also partnered with and registry platform in early 2018 to implement and technologies to innovate the global art trade industry.
As previously reported, Austrac a licensing framework for domestic exchanges in April 2018, which requires operators to and abide by rules and checks.
Earlier this month, tech giant released its -powered main net from its Melbourne-based data center, which allows enterprises to run their applications on the company’s cloud. In July 2018, IBM had a five-year $740 million deal with the Australian government to use and other new technologies to improve data security and automation across federal departments, including defense and home affairs.
Published at Mon, 25 Feb 2019 08:18:11 +0000