Hardly a week goes by without the media reporting a large scale hack of sensitive personal or account information. Increasingly, the public seems resigned to believe that such compromises are the new normal, producing a kind of breach fatigue that may be lowering the expectations consumers have for identity and online security. Still, businesses must continue to apply comprehensive, data driven intelligence that helps thwart both breaches and the malicious use of breached information and protect all parties’ interests.
Fraudsters are continuously looking to capitalize on new opportunities. Businesses need to implement an effective fraud and identity solution to prevent sophisticated attacks and balance fraud detection with ease of interactions. Watch this on-demand webinar to learn more about the impact of recent and rising fraud trends and how the proper investment in technology can help businesses mitigate credit risk and fraud while enhancing the consumer experience.
U.S.-based financial institutions have recently reported an increase in fraudulent activity across a range of accounts and lifecycle stages. Most notable are the trends in account takeover, demand deposit account and new account fraud, all of which are exploiting addressable weaknesses. What’s the best way to prevent these types of fraud? It starts with implementing the right tools.
In this webinar, experts from Experian and Liminal discuss recent and upcoming fraud trends impacting all types of businesses -- including financial institutions, tech companies and more -- and how an automated fraud solution can minimize fraud, provide consumer confidence and reduce silos within organizations.
The acceleration to digital platforms created a perfect storm of new opportunities for fraudsters. Synthetic identity fraud, stimulus-related fraud, and other types of cybercrime have seen huge upticks within the past year and a half. In fact, the Federal Trade Commission revealed that consumers reported over 360,000 complaints, resulting in more than $545 million in COVID-19-related fraud losses as of September 2021. To protect both themselves and consumers, businesses — especially lenders — will have to find and incorporate new strategies to identify customers, deter fraudsters and mitigate cybercrime.
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