Hosting scams on your platform is bad for business, which is why on Tuesday, a group of major tech companies including Match Group, Meta, Coinbase and others are jointly launching a new coalition to take on online fraud across dating apps, social media and crypto.
The new coalition, Tech Against Scams, will work to find ways to fight back against the tools used by scammers and to better educate the public against financial scams.
Even before series like “The Tinder Swindler,” romance scams have been costing users significant sums. According to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, this type of scam cost its victims more money than any other type of consumer fraud as of 2019. Fraud on social media is an issue, too: U.S. consumers lost $770 million on social media scams in 2021, up 18 times over 2017. Last year, the FTC also reported that investment scams led to consumer losses of more than $3.8 billion, or more than double the amount lost in 2021.
And then there is, of course, crypto, an industry so rife with fraud that company founders and other industry notables are going to jail for fraud and grift, money laundering, hacks and more. A whole blog spun up just to keep track of the latest fallout in this space, in fact.
Though this fraud takes place on the platforms, as opposed to being committed by the platforms themselves (well … outside of crypto), allowing it to run rampant can give the tech companies a bad reputation. What’s more, many of the scams span platforms, like how a dating app scam may eventually drive a user to a crypto exchange, for example. That has led to increased demand for better data-sharing between companies to help combat the problem.
Joining Meta, Coinbase and Match (the parent company to Tinder, Hinge and others), are others in the crypto space like Kraken, Ripple and Gemini. Together, the firms plan to work to protect their users against romance scams and other types of fraud, like the crypto scam known as “pig butchering.” The latter is a long-term scam involving investment fraud, where the victim is lured into making crypto investments. The scammer often targets users on social apps, befriending them or building trust with communication before stealing their funds.
With AI, the difference between scams and real-life interactions is getting harder to detect, too. As Yahoo Finance reported last year, scammers are using AI to create “persuasive FaceTime calls, phone calls, and emails” to their victims, where they may pose as loved ones, prospective lovers, friends or even IRS agents.
“Tech companies across industries collaborating with each other is essential in preventing criminal activities, and ultimately helps online platforms stay ahead, develop effective solutions, and address various types of financial crimes,” said Yoel Roth, VP of Trust & Safety at Match Group, and formerly of Twitter. “As we aim to make it harder for scammers to defraud online users, we will also continue investing in features to help disrupt fraud and remove scammers from our platform before they commit harm.”
Meta Chief Security Officer Guy Rosen added that the companies needed to join forces to fully tackle this problem. “Scammers and the organized criminal groups behind pig butchering schemes target people across many internet services, making it hard for any one company to see the full picture of malicious activity and counting on each of us working in silo,” he noted.
To protect users from fraud on their respective platforms, the companies will share tips and information with one another. They’ll collaborate on ways to educate and protect consumers against the ever-evolving crop of financial scams on the market. The coalition members will also continue to work with law enforcement, when necessary, to support their investigations by sharing information about online fraud and crimes that took place on their platforms.
Comment