What Businesses Need to Know in the Wake of the
Equifax Breach
By Jason Tan, CEO of Sift Science
Online businesses everywhere are going to be
dealing with the effects of the recent Equifax breach. It’s a tough truth to
swallow, but these large-scale data breaches have become a fact of life – and
it’s not just the breached business that pays the price. As fraudsters mine the
valuable data that’s been compromised, all e-commerce sites and financial
institutions need to be on alert.
Keep an eye out for signs of account takeover.
Last year, 48% of online businesses saw an
increase in account takeover (ATO), according to the Sift Science Fraud-Fighting Trends report. And the Equifax breach is likely to exacerbate this
trend, potentially flooding the dark web with names, addresses, Social Security
numbers, and other personal information that fraudsters can leverage to gain
access to a legitimate user’s account. They then make purchases with a stored
payment method or drain value from the user’s account.
Some of the signals that could point to an ATO:
- Login attempts from different devices and locations
- Switching to older browsers and operating systems
- Buying more than usual, or higher priced items
- Changing settings, shipping address, or passwords
- Multiple failed login attempts
- Suspicious device configurations, like proxy or VPN setups
Keep in mind that taken individually, each of
these signs may be normal behavior for a particular user. It’s only when you
apply behavioral analysis on a large scale, looking at all of a user’s activity
and all activity of users across the network, that you can accurately detect
ATO.
Monitor for fake accounts and synthetic identity
fraud.
Fraudsters can also take all of the different
pieces of personal data leaked in the Equifax breach to steal someone’s
identity and create new accounts. They may also pick and choose pieces from
various people’s accounts – like a birthday, Social Security number, and name –
and mix them together to create an entirely new ID.
To keep tabs on fake accounts, you can monitor
new signups to look for risky patterns, like a sudden spike in new accounts
that can’t be attributed to a specific promotion or seasonal trend. If the
average time it takes a new user to sign up suddenly gets much faster, that may
point to fraudsters using a script to quickly create accounts. And seeing
multiple new accounts coming from the same IP address or device is a red flag
for a single person creating many accounts.
Stay focused on maintaining user trust.
Even if a breach doesn’t happen on your site,
any downstream fraud attacks still happen on your watch. If you don’t invest in
protecting your users from the devastating effects of ATO, identity theft, and
fraud, you will soon lose their trust. Trust is earned in drops, but lost in
buckets.
At the same time, e-commerce businesses and
financial institutions should make sure they aren’t overly cautious to the
point where they’re rejecting good customers and denying legitimate accounts.
Preventing fraud is a delicate balancing act, and the right technology – which
looks at a range of data points to make an accurate prediction about what is
and isn’t fraudulent – can help you strike the right balance.
About the Author:
Jason Tan is the CEO of Sift Science, a trust platform that
offers a full suite of fraud and abuse prevention products designed to attack
every vector of online fraud for industries and businesses across the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment