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Search resuls for: "Fraud Intelligence"


6 mentions found


U.S. and Canadian banks reported a tenfold surge in digital scams this year as criminals flock to techniques that rely on duping customers into sending them money, according to cybersecurity firm BioCatch. Banks are under pressure to kick criminals off their platforms and compensate more victims as regulators and lawmakers focus on the harm done by digital scams. Customers of the three banks reported a combined $166 million in Zelle transactions were fraudulent in 2023. BioCatch declined to provide a specific number for reported scams, citing client confidentiality. In another sign of the cat-and-mouse dynamic of cybercrime, BioCatch clients reported 59% fewer fraudulent account openings.
Persons: Tom Peacock, Fraudsters, Peacock, Banks, Wells Fargo, Zelle, BioCatch Organizations: Global, CNBC, American Express, Barclays, HSBC, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Consumer Financial, Services Locations: Tel Aviv, Israel, Wells, U.S
Meta is facing calls from U.K. banks and payment firms like Revolut to financially compensate people who fall for scams on their services. Proposals to make tech firms liableTensions have been running high between banks and tech companies for some time. A key ask has been for the tech firms to share more detailed intelligence on how criminals are abusing their platforms. Social media firms not doing enough to combat and remove attempts to defraud internet users was another complaint from regulatory authorities at the event. Jones added that it was tough to "break the inertia" at tech companies to "really get them to get after it."
Persons: Jaap Arriens, it's, Meta, Woody Malouf, Matt Akroyd, Kate Fitzgerald, Rob Jones, Jones Organizations: Nurphoto, Getty, Systems, PSR, Payments Association, Facebook, NatWest, Metro Bank, Financial Times, Labour Party, CNBC, Stewarts, Social, Economic Crime, U.K, National Crime Agency, Tech, Meta, Intelligence Locations: London
Meta is partnering with banks to identify scam accounts. Meta says the collaboration led to the removal of 20,000 scam accounts in the UK alone. So Meta launched a new program that allows banks to "share intelligence" directly with the social media conglomerate to more efficiently combat scams. Meta said in a statement that, based on data shared by the two banks, it has already removed 20,000 accounts it believes were run by scammers. In just the first six months, the program blocked 8,000 different pages and 9,000 celebrity scams, Meta told the outlet.
Persons: Meta, , David Lindberg, Andrew Forrest Organizations: Meta, Service, Facebook, Intelligence, Wednesday, NatWest, Metro Bank, scammers, Guardian, Retail Banking, Australian Competition, Consumer Commission, Business Locations: Australia, cryptocurrency
Facebook parent company Meta on Wednesday said that it's working with two leading banks in the U.K. on an information-sharing arrangement to help protect consumers from fraud. Meta said that the tech has already been tested with multiple lenders in the U.K. "We will only beat these criminals if we work together and share relevant information related to scams. Meta has long faced calls from banks in the U.K. to do more to stop scammers from running rampant on its platforms, which include Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Meta already has policies in place banning promotion of financial fraud, such as loan scams and schemes promising high rates of returns.
Persons: Meta, scammers, Nathaniel Gleicher, Gleicher, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Facebook, Meta, Intelligence, Exchange, NatWest, Metro Bank . NatWest, Metro Bank, scammers Locations: British
AdvertisementThe victims of a romance scammer who defrauded women he met on Tinder out of over $100,000 have spoken out about being targeted. Peter Gray, 35, from Yorkshire, UK, found his victims on Tinder and won their trust, BBC News reported. Romance scams have boomed since the onset of the pandemic, with Americans losing over $1.3 billion to the practice in 2022, up 164% from 2019, Business Insider previously reported. In the UK, over £92 million (about $115 million) was lost to romance scams in the same year, according to data from the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau. AdvertisementGray used information from driving licenses to scam Tinder dates"It was shocking," a sister of one of Gray's victims told BBC News.
Persons: Peter Gray, , Gray, Jessica, Hannah, Elizabeth, Tinder Organizations: Service, BBC News, Business, Federal Trade Commission, National Fraud Intelligence, BBC Locations: Yorkshire
In the US, romance scams resulting from catfishing have among the highest reported financial losses of internet crimes as a whole. A 2019 study found that young LGBTQ+ men in rural America experiencing catfishing on dating apps felt angry and fearful. She also emphasized the need to recognize today’s loneliness epidemic, which “leads people to perhaps be more susceptible to catfishing scams,” she said. Catfishing is not explicitly a crime, but the actions that often accompany catfishing, such as extortion for money, gifts or sexual images are crimes in many places. In the US, romance scams resulting from catfishing have among the highest reported financial losses of internet crimes as a whole.
Persons: CNN —, Nev Schulman, “ Megan ”, Schulman, Evita, scammers, Catfishing, Snapchat, , Ngo Minh Hieu, Chong, Hieu, Wang, , It’s, Fangzhou Wang, ” Wang, Maryna, WeChat Organizations: CNN, Cybersmile Foundation, Federation University, Fraud Intelligence, INTERPOL, Research, US Federal Trade Commission, SMS, University of Texas, Arlington, Getty, Facebook, UNICEF Locations: Alaska, Australia, Singapore, Southeast Asia, France, Germany, India, cryptocurrency, Vietnamese, America, catfishing, China, Cybersecurity, Australian
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