Financial Fraud Execs Adopting Behavioral Biometrics Aim to Counter Scam Attacks: Report

LexisNexis Risk Solutions recently published a white paper produced by Aite-Novarica exploring the challenges in addressing sophisticated fraud threats “following increased digital adoption and consumers’ high expectations for online transactions.”

The white paper, Multifaceted Fraud Attacks: Behavioral Biometrics as a Defensive Tool, explains “that most people are using person-to-person (P2P) payment platforms more frequently since the start of the pandemic.”

However, a consumer survey in the whitepaper “reveals that 10% of U.S. respondents are using the services less often, along with 9% of UK consumers and 7% in Singapore.”

Of consumers who “had reduced using P2P services, a significant proportion of consumers in the U.S. (43%), UK (46%) and Singapore (35%) changed their behavior due to fraud concerns.”

Stephen Topliss, vice president, fraud and identity strategy, LexisNexis Risk Solutions, said:

“Fraud executives are deeply concerned about increasing fraud attacks and the effect it has on consumers and their organization’s reputation when losses occur. Businesses need the most multi-dimensional view available of an identity to make high-quality decisions. Behavioral biometrics allows businesses to provide an optimal customer experience by passively authenticating them and only inserting additional steps into their journey if there is a higher risk.”

Further findings in the white paper show “that 48% of fraud executives ranked consumer scam attacks among their top concerns in 2022 when thinking about transaction control frameworks.”

In addition to driving a significant amount of fraud, scams are also “fraught with challenges given that the execution of the scam requires acts by the true customer for the fraudster to profit.”

An increasing number of organizations “have begun implementing behavioral biometrics in their fraud operations.”

Fraud executives in North America “rank their satisfaction with behavioral biometric solutions as second only to the risk engines they use, according to the white paper.”

Business users’ satisfaction “with behavioral biometrics ranked above more established approaches, including third-party identity verification, credit bureau scoring and device ownership and history verification.”

Jim Mortensen, strategic advisor at Aite-Novarica Group, said:

“The adoption of behavioral biometrics technology is appealing from both a fraud prevention and customer experience perspective. The capability is attractive as it authenticates users on a passive basis, in the background, and requires no active intervention by the customer beyond their normal use of the app or website.”

Behavioral biometrics and related technologies for risk scoring “can help organizations address fraud and authentication challenges.”

Behavioral biometrics “analyzes how a person interacts with a device, including attributes such as the angle at which a consumer holds a mobile phone or tablet, how much pressure they apply to its screen, surface swipes and directional motion, as well as typing rhythm and other keyboard patterns.”

It works completely in the background “without adding unnecessary friction to the consumer’s journey to create a unique profile that can help authenticate genuine user interactions and flag bad actors and sessions where legitimate users may be acting under a bad actor’s direction.”

Financial fraud executives’ most common concerns also “include various types of losses because of application fraud, with bad checks, mule activity and synthetic identities all named among the top two worries by 22% of executives.”

Fraud investigators can find it difficult “to identify synthetic identities because they may appear similar to consumers who are new to the country or to credit.”

A multi-dimensional view of applicants “helps fraud executives detect suspicious identities and make better informed decisions.”

A multi-layered set of risk solutions, including behavioral biometrics tools such as LexisNexis® BehavioSec®, enhances an organization’s ability to detect scams by identifying distinct behavioral patterns. LexisNexis BehavioSec provides matching scores that indicate how likely it is that behavior is aligned with the genuine consumer or related to unusual behavior and coaching that indicates a scam.

Methodology

The white paper was “informed by Aite-Novarica Group’s ongoing industry research on financial service industry trends related to fraud threat vectors and fraud detection and prevention frameworks.”

This research also “includes insights from surveys of industry fraud executives and quantitative studies of consumers’ fraud experience and mitigation efforts.”

It is “further augmented by interviews with solution providers about topics that are top of mind to their prospective buyers and direct conversations with fraud and security professionals fighting to protect their financial services firms.”



Sponsored Links by DQ Promote

 

 

Send this to a friend