mCommerce boom raises cybersecurity risk

Asia’s mComerce boom is creating a growing target for online fraud and cybersecurity risks, according to fraud consultancy Fico Group.

Criminals who used to focus on ATM skimming are turning their attention online in an effort to compromise credit and debit card data. These attacks can be far more lucrative, with more details stolen and a lower chance of getting caught, warns Fico.

“The demographics suggest that this this will soon become a very big data problem.  In the next 15 years, Asia is expected to add another 1 billion internet users, which comes on top of the 700 million it has today, making it the world’s largest market for online consumers.”

With fraud challenges growing, the issues and technologies needed to address them will be discussed this week in Bali, Indonesia, where Fico will hold its regional Fraud Forum with bank executives from across Asia Pacific.

The last year alone has seen an average 22 per cent increase in shopping on mobile phones across 13 Asia-Pacific markets, according to a 2015 study from Visa. Indonesia, China and Taiwan reported the highest rates of growth for 2015 at 36 per cent, 34 per cent and 28 per cent respectively.

With these card-not-present (CNP) transactions, the retailer never sees the customer or their physical card, and the cardholder doesn’t enter their PIN. At last year’s Fico Asia Pacific Fraud Forum in Singapore, 94 per cent of attendees said that cases of online or CNP fraud had increased at their organisation.

Spotting and finding anomalies in this pool of data requires sophisticated self-learning and adaptive technologies so banks can catch fraud vectors as quickly as criminals exploit them. Fico is currently testing the geolocation abilities of mobile devices and integrating them with the Fico Falcon Platform, which protects 2.5 billion payment cards worldwide. By validating whether a consumer’s phone is in the same place where their card is being used, the system can reduce false positives while focusing on the most likely incidents of fraud. Banks can also send SMS messages to the consumer’s mobile to validate a transaction in real time.

Maintaining trust in shopping from mobile devices will also require a new approach to cybersecurity. Data breaches at poorly protected retailers can threaten ecommerce sales. Predictive analytics is needed, rather than signature-based solutions, so that so-called “zero day” attacks can be identified and controlled.

Raed Taji, head of global fraud consulting for Fico in Asia Pacific, said: “We are seeing rapid changes in customer behavior which then open up opportunities for fraud. In Australia, for example, cash withdrawals from ATMs have fallen 20 per cent in three years, thanks to

tap-and-go card and mobile payment technologies. The focus on online fraud is growing very rapidly, so we must stay nimble to reduce losses.”

Dan McConaghy, president for Fico in Asia Pacific, added: “Digital disruption to financial services may present fraud challenges, but it also presents opportunities for us to stop criminals. If consumer payments shift toward a new form of payment, fraudsters will seek out the most vulnerable element – which increasingly means a mobile device.

“By investing in an analytics-based solution, lenders can add a powerful tool to their arsenal to stay ahead of new criminal fraud patterns.”

You have 7 articles remaining. Unlock 15 free articles a month, it’s free.