Skip to main content

Online fraud still a stumbling block for mobile payments, say experts

Confidence in e-commerce continues to suffer due to the incidence of online fraud. “The question of security and trust is a growing concern,” says Pierre-Antoine Vacheron, managing director, Ingenico Payment Services. “E-commerce makes up 15% of total commerce, but attracts 60% of fraud.”
November 4, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Pierre-Antoine Vacheron, managing director, Ingenico Payment Services

Confidence in e-commerce continues to suffer due to the incidence of online fraud. “The question of security and trust is a growing concern,” says Pierre-Antoine Vacheron, managing director, Ingenico Payment Services.

“E-commerce makes up 15% of total commerce, but attracts 60% of fraud.” The technology to combat this is available, he insists. What is needed is a major drive to adopt the correct standard so one solution can be put in place to fight it, not the jigsaw of current proposals and schemes. However, whatever solution is found, it must be user-friendly so that customers will use it, Vacheron adds. And when data breach incidents do occur, there must be a faster response from the payments and financial industries to repair the damage, says Eric Duforest, managing director of the payment business unit at Oberthur Technologies. Typically, it takes from 10 to 20 days to completely ‘close the window’ to fraudsters who try to use stolen information to purchase goods and services. The industry needs to work to shorten that danger period to just hours after the breach is discovered. However, speakers at the Opening Summit of CARTES SECURE CONNEXIONS said that customers also had a responsibility to use common sense to ensure their security. Giving away information on social media is risky – and not only for fraud. A posting on Facebook about a three-week yachting holiday is like placing a sign on a home that it was empty, the conference heard.

Related Content

  • Morpho, Transport for London and Zwipe in running for SESAMES Awards
    October 28, 2014
    The winners of the SESAMES Awards – often called the Oscars of the smart card, digital security, identification and secure transactions sectors – will be announced on Monday 3 November. The coveted trophies will be awarded in a gala ceremony in the heart of Paris, on the eve of CARTES. The finalists in the 11 categories covering the best technological innovations are:
  • CARTES examines the pros and cons of Bitcoin
    November 3, 2014
    Money is changing. Despite some widely-publicised recent problems, the Bitcoin system is now worth around €7 billion ($8.9 billion) and other ‘crypto-currencies’ such as Ripple are gaining momentum. The success of these pioneers shows that customers are increasingly ready to consider payment systems that are different from traditional dollars, euros and yen.
  • Asecap Days 2023: Data drives the best decisions
    December 22, 2023
    Almost all the data being collected by highway operators is going to waste. But if firms collect and analyse these ‘vast lakes of data’ they can investigate threats, monitor management systems and drive up revenues, delegates were told at Asecap Days 2023. Geoff Hadwick reports
  • Improving the positional accuracy of GNSS road user charging
    July 23, 2012
    The European GINA project is intended to address and overcome many of the institutional, technical and public acceptance hurdles currently faced by satellite-based road user charging schemes. Dave Tindall and Denis Naberezhnykh, TRL, and Laure Dezes, ERF, write. Pay-as-you-drive Road User Charging (RUC), whereby demand (or congestion) is managed by applying appropriate tariffs in order to encourage drivers to make their journeys at less busy times, on less congested routes or even on different modes, could