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AI prevents millions in fraud from impacting businesses

The AI solution Visa Advanced Authorisation has helped financial institutions prevent nearly $88 million in fraud from impacting New Zealand businesses in the past year[1]. Visa pioneered the use of neural […]

Glenn Baker
Glenn Baker
November 22, 2021 2 Mins Read
1K

The AI solution Visa Advanced Authorisation has helped financial institutions prevent nearly $88 million in fraud from impacting New Zealand businesses in the past year[1].

Visa pioneered the use of neural networks, modeled on the human brain, to power its AI technology that analyses the risk of transactions in real-time to identify and stop fraud. The AI algorithm assesses more than 500 risk attributes in roughly a millisecond to produce a score of every transaction’s predicted fraud probability.

While fraud rates have remained stable over the past year and globally near historic lows, Visa’s AI-powered security is increasingly critical as payments continue a rapid shift online, where fraudsters tend to commit most of their crime. NZ Post reported that in 2020, over two million New Zealanders shopped online, up 9.2% on the prior year, and spent $5.8 billion on online shopping – $1.2 billion more than in 2019.[2]

“As consumer spending continues to move online, so has the focus of fraudsters. We are investing more heavily than ever in technology that ensures a safe and secure marketplace – combatting fraud while enabling seamless, genuine transactions. This investment, which includes a global team of over 850 cyber specialists, covers systems resilience, cybersecurity tools like tokenisation, AI and blockchain-based solutions,” said Anthony Watson, Visa’s Country Manager for New Zealand and South Pacific.

One of the top threats to emerge for businesses in New Zealand and globally the past year is enumeration, the criminal practice that involves using automation to test and guess payment credentials such as account numbers, CVV2, and/or expiry dates during online checkout.

To counter this, Visa is leveraging another AI-powered solution, Visa Account Attack Intelligence, which spots patterns in data that are otherwise undetectable by humans. The technology uses cutting-edge machine learning to identify account testing, analyse the details of the attack, and enable Visa to take action in near real-time.

“The most fundamental attribute in commerce is trust – if a business loses a customer’s trust, they lose sales,” says Watson. “The global nature of Visa’s network means we’re able to apply learnings from transactions processed by Visa at merchants in every country and territory we operate in around the world to protect New Zealand businesses.”

 


[1] VisaNet transactions, May 2020 – April 2021

[2] NZ Post, The Full Download 2021

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Glenn Baker
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Glenn Baker

Glenn is a professional writer/editor with 50-plus years’ experience across radio, television and magazine publishing.

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