05 April 2026
The Reserve Bank of India has released its draft “Reserve
Bank of India (Commercial Banks – Responsible Business Conduct) Third Amendment
Directions, 2026” for public comments, strengthening customer protection in
digital transactions.
The draft can be accessed via https://www.rbi.org.in
(Notifications section), while fraud reporting continues through https://cybercrime.gov.in and helpline
1930.
In earlier reflections, I explored how reporting is becoming
immediate, how timing shapes protection, and how responsibility begins to
shift.
This time, I paused at something different—a number.
My earlier reflections on this subject are at
01)
https://prashantnepayments.blogspot.com/2026/03/rbi-draft-2026-fraud-reporting-instant-76g2.html
A Personal Pause at 85%
Within the draft, there is a structured provision:
👉
Compensation of up to 85% of loss (or ₹25,000 cap) in certain
small-value fraud cases
At first glance, it feels specific.
But on reflection, it feels carefully designed.
Not Zero, Not Full — Something In
Between
This provision sits between two extremes:
- Not
full reimbursement
- Not
complete loss
Instead, it creates a middle path.
For fraud cases up to ₹50,000:
- A
portion of the loss is absorbed
- The
impact on the customer is reduced
It is not perfection.
But it is protection.
A Different Kind of Responsibility
What stood out to me is the shift in approach.
Instead of asking:
Who should bear the loss completely?
The framework suggests:
Let the loss be shared
Across:
- the
system
- the
banks
- and
the broader ecosystem
This creates a structured safety net, rather than a
binary outcome.
The Human Side of It
Most fraud cases are not large in value.
But they are:
- frequent
- unsettling
- personal
For someone facing such a situation,
even partial recovery matters.
It does not undo the event.
But it softens the impact.
A Simple Way to Understand This
In practice, this could mean:
- For
smaller fraud cases (up to ₹50,000), partial compensation may apply
- Typically,
up to 85% of the loss (subject to a cap)
- The
compensation is shared across institutions within the system
At the same time:
- Timely
reporting remains important
- Delays
or certain forms of negligence may affect eligibility
Connecting the Series
If I step back and look at the journey:
- Alerts
are becoming actionable
- Reporting
is becoming immediate
- Timing
is becoming decisive
- Responsibility
is becoming shared
- And
now, loss is being partially absorbed
This does not feel like isolated provisions.
It feels like layers of protection being built over time.
The dots need to be identified and connected.
Final Reflection
85% is not a perfect number. Well, it is difficult for any
number to be perfect.
But it is a thoughtful one.
It acknowledges that:
- systems
are not flawless
- users
are not always at fault
- and
losses should not fall entirely on one side
In digital transactions, protection is evolving—
not as a single guarantee, but as a combination of support mechanisms.
And this feels like one such step.
Disclaimer
This post is a personal reflection on a draft regulatory
document released for public comments.
The observations are interpretative in nature and intended for general
awareness.
The Joy of Digital Transactions
Nayakanti Prashant
Citizen Advocate – Digital Transactions Day (Proposed) April 11
Series archive:
https://movethebarrier.blogspot.com/April11SafeePayDay
Author’s blogs
https://prashantrandomthoughts.blogspot.com
https://prashantnepayments.blogspot.com
https://innovationinbanking.blogspot.com




