Home Podcast Spotting online fraud, stopping it in its tracks

[B-SIDE Podcast] Spotting online fraud, stopping it in its tracks

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With the holiday season in full swing, there鈥檚 going to be a lot of opportunity for online fraud during e-commerce transactions.

鈥淢erchants are so focused on growing as quickly as possible, that they forget to put the right fraud tool,鈥 said James L. Melon, country manager of fraud prevention services company Vesta. 鈥淭he need is [only] realized when they get exposed from fraud attacks. Merchants make up for this by selling more volume, but it鈥檚 like pouring more water into a leaky bucket.鈥

In this听B-Side听episode, Mr. Melon tells听大象传媒听reporter Patricia B. Mirasol about reputational risks and red flags that online merchants should watch out for.

TAKEAWAYS

Fraudsters are targeting digital wallets.听

The two main types of fraud are account fraud, where a fraudster steals account information such as bank details through听links laced with viruses; and transaction fraud, where account information stolen from the dark web is used for online purchases.听

Card testing, Mr. Melon said, is particularly tricky, as it can be done in one or more cards and can fly under the radar of merchants.听听

A card testing attack occurs when fraudsters 鈥 having acquired partial or full card credentials 鈥 employ digital tools to submit authorization requests on e-commerce sites.听听the main objective for such attacks is to reveal the card鈥檚 missing security elements.听

鈥淚ncreasingly, fraudsters are targeting digital wallets more now,鈥 said Mr. Melon.听

听show that 2 in 3 Filipino shoppers (69%) prefer to use e-wallets when purchasing online听

Merchants risk their reputation as well as their revenue.听

Sophisticated or not, businesses lose revenue on several fronts from payment frauds, including:听听

  • The acceptance of bad transactions 鈥 This results in high fraud rates, high bank charge fees, as well as 鈥渢he unquantifiable but very important鈥澨reputational risk.听
  • The rejection of good transactions 鈥 Caused by rule-based engines, this mistaken treatment 鈥斕听鈥 results in low approval rates. 鈥淚f there is a P50,000 limit on daily transactions, then what happens to the legitimate customer who wants to purchase more?鈥 asked Mr. Melon. 鈥淐ustomers, including myself, will not hesitate to go other stores with better checkout experiences.鈥澨
  • Customer friction 鈥 If the rejection of good transactions is from international cards, then Filipino merchants miss out on revenue opportunities. Mr. Melon pointed out that 10%鈥20% of transactions in the country are done through international cards.听听
  • Operational inefficiencies听鈥撎A company鈥檚 resources are better spent growing the business rather than putting out cyber fraud-related fires.听

Don鈥檛 sacrifice security for speed.

The rate of attempted cyber fraud in Southeast Asia is 12 times greater than the global average, according to research by Vesta. The reason for this, Mr. Melon said, is because e-commerce in the region is growing at a much faster rate than mature markets.听听

He offered three tips for merchants who wish to combine speed and security in their operations: understand fraud and acceptance rates; integrate machine learning to have more data points that improves the speed of decision-making; and do away with static rules.听听

鈥淒on鈥檛 measure fraud and acceptance rates in isolation,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ork with technology partners that can calibrate in real-time the difference between good and bad transactions.鈥澨

This, he added, can strike the balance between maximizing the approvals of legitimate sales, while blocking the bad ones.听听

Recorded remotely on Nov. 9. Produced by听Paolo L. Lopez听and听Sam L. Marcelo.

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