Related Blogs


« Consumer spending rises on UK cards | Main | Cybercops & robbers: Digital posses to bust bank bandits »

Web Banking Fraud Actually in Decline

American Banker recently published an article on the decline in internet banking fraud losses and the emerging threat of first-party fraud. FICO fraud experts, including fraud blogger Brian Kinch, are quoted. Here's an excerpt:

Most of the recent attention in fraud technology has been on third-party fraud. The most common forms of which are identity theft and account takeover. However, about 6 or 7 years ago in the U.K., a team at FICO identified a new very sophisticated method of fraud emerging – that of first-party fraud. I recently had the opportunity to talk with the team at FICO managing the response to this threat.

First-party fraud is the use of what appears to be a real identity that satisfies application requirements, but where there is no intent to pay for the credit facility or loan that is given. It can often involves a synthetic ID that has been generated over years or months to look legitimate.

Read the full American Banker article, "Web Banking Fraud Actually in Decline."

First time on the Banking Analytics Blog?
Subscribe to the Banking Analytics Blog Feed or check out some other recent posts:

Comments

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear on this weblog until the author has approved them.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In.