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Are New Online Personal Finance Sites Safe?

A commenter yesterday asked if anyone had heard of BudgetPulse, an online personal finance site that opened its public beta site two weeks ago.

Well, we hadn't heard of it, but in this increasingly crowded space, that's no surprise. We are now tracking more than 20 online personal finance sites (previous coverage here). With low-cost server space, easier programming tools, APIs, and cheap viral marketing through blogs and social networks, the barriers to entry are a fraction of what they were just a few years ago. A good programmer could put together a simple financial tracker in their spare time.

While this will spur creativity and innovation, ultimately benefiting end-users, there is a downside. Security and privacy.

As we looked at BudgetPulse, which at first glance looks like several other Web 2.0-inspired finance sites, we couldn't help but wonder who was behind the site. There are no names, personal or company. Even the who is info for the domain is masked (domain registered in April). The only email address is disguised in spam-defeating format: "info (at) budgetpulse.com". Right now, the public portion is a two-page website with a few popup forms. The FAQs are empty. The forum is coming soon. There is a blog, but it only has three short posts. And there are misspellings in the website and blog copy. The websites entire security discussion is a single sentence:

We protect your account and data with advanced security methods.

More than likely this is simply the work of one individual who concentrated on coding the functionality first, and whose day job prevents him/her from spellchecking their HTML. But what if it's a scam? Convince a few people to use it to track their finances, then hit them with requests for their credit card numbers "to enhance the experience" or to their checking account number for payments, e.g., "Join our beta test and earn $500/mo as you test it."  

I admit that could be far-fetched, and I have absolutely zero knowledge of that happening at BudgetPulse or any other site. But it does bring up the bigger issue of consumer trust at independent, non-regulated personal finance sites (i.e., non-financial institutions). Even the well-funded personal finance sites such as Wesabe and Mint must deal with the mistrust and skepticism consumers have for new companies wanting to get involved in their lives, especially their finances. 

The solution: Financial institutions, with their trusted brands, partnering with or acquiring online personal finance sites to bring new functions and features to their customers.