30 Mar 2007
New changes in the law mean that companies will have to report fraud directly to their banks, rather than the police, leading some experts to predict that it could make the process of reporting fraud less convoluted.
The new rules come into force on the 1 April and are an attempt to cut the bureaucracy involved in the reporting and investigation of online fraud, according to Apacs' Sandra Quinn.
Further reading
Since the NHTCU (National Hi Tech Crime Unit) was subsumed into the new Soca (Serious Organised Crime Agency), many firms have criticised the lack of a single body to deal with e-crime. The e-Crime Unit within Soca has a larger remit, dealing with global organised crime, while local police forces have been criticised for lacking the resources or focus necessary to help organisations when they have been hit by an attack.
"The NHTCU was rolled into Soca but [this new organisation] doesn't seem to have the public-facing relationship as the NHTCU," said Quinn. "This will be a way of filling that gap – each police force will now have a single point of contact for the banking industry."
The new rules will mean banks will decide whether to report an incidence of fraud to the police, depending on the amount lost and whether it appears to have been committed by a serial perpetrator.
"The difficulty has always been that having regional police forces means they have a different focus and different priorities," said Quinn. "There's a lack of awareness in law enforcement about this kind of fraud and we're looking at ways of bridging that gap, too."
David Roberts, chief executive of blue-chip user group The Corporate IT Forum, said the organisation "welcomes any initiative that genuinely makes it harder for cyber criminals to attack businesses and makes it easier for consumers and corporates to report cases of cyber crime".
Reporting online fraud was also on the agenda at the fourth Prove-ID forum for retail fraud managers organised by 192.com Business Services last month.
"A common theme was that when retailers try to report fraud, it's a slow and arduous process," explained 192's marketing director, David Pope. "Each police force has three strategic directives and fraud is not in the top three. A lot of retailers lamented the fact that the NHTCU's priorities have been realigned in Soca."
In related news, Soca has come in for criticism for not doing more to stop hackers stealing nearly 46 million credit card details from US fashion chain TK Maxx, over a several month period between July 2005 and December 2006.
"This is a high-profile target and to be a victim for almost 18 months suggests that the hacker really knew their stuff – if that is not a serious crime then what is?” argued Tom Newton of security vendor SmoothWall.
It's a very good move to protect the card users.
There's a new software coming up to prevent ecomerce frauds called COURBAR. It's generates voice call on the mobile handset of the cards user to self authenticate their transactions. I think this will not require anybody to handle frauds as the user themselves authenticate the transactions.
Posted by: Paresh Solanki 15 Jun 2007
Some have slammed this new regime, suggesting it will give banks more flexibility by allowing them to decide which cases to report to the authorities.
I disagree with these claims. If anything, it will cause them to have less flexibility as they face this new reporting regime.
Strategies in combating card fraud are becoming more defined, with the government setting up a National Fraud Strategic Authority and a National Fraud Reporting Centre will be put in place. With fraud being so high on the agenda, banks will find it difficult to sweep cases under the carpet.
The industry needs to proactively refine anti-fraud activities to prevent being swamped with new directives on fighting fraud over the coming years, as this new initiative could be a thin slice of the wedge as government and police ramp up procedures for reporting fraud and fighting terrorism.
Posted by: Bart Patrick, Strategy Manager for Risk Intelligence, SAS UK 05 Apr 2007
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