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ASEAN Telecom Companies Under Increasing Pressure to Tackle Mobile Fraud

ASEAN Telecom Companies Under Increasing Pressure to Tackle Mobile Fraud

Key Takeaway

The GSMA outlines a framework for Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) to transition from mere communication providers to vital security partners. By leveraging their networks as defenses against fraud, MNOs can utilize actionable intelligence to identify and mitigate threats. The report emphasizes focusing on high-risk communication channels, such as voice and messaging, and suggests enhancing caller verification and SMS policies. It advocates for selective data sharing to improve fraud prevention, with a significant percentage of consumers open to sharing limited information. MNOs can monetize these capabilities, offering fraud detection services while ensuring user privacy through secure APIs.


From Infrastructure to Intelligence: The MNO Advantage

The GSMA outlines a framework for how MNOs can transition from communication service providers to essential security partners.

Rather than merely acting as passive carriers of traffic, operator networks can serve as a frontline defense against fraud, equipped with actionable intelligence to identify and mitigate threats before they impact consumers.

A significant opportunity exists in securing what the report refers to as the “hot routes,” which are the most exploited communication channels.

“Concentrate on the channels that are most critical: voice and OTT voice/messaging,” the report recommends.

This involves enhancing verified caller display, reinforcing SMS sender-ID policies, and expanding takedown mechanisms for social media scams.

Simultaneously, the GSMA advocates for a strategic approach to data sharing.

While privacy remains a concern for 97% of users, there is a willingness to engage in selective data sharing if it enhances fraud prevention.

The report indicates that 72% of consumers are comfortable with operators sharing limited information, such as fraud indicators, and this percentage increases to 78% when restricted to high-risk situations like suspicious transactions.

The report details how “simple yes/no Digital Identity signals,” such as SIM change flags, number verification, or coarse location data, can be shared with banks and fintech companies to aid in fraud prevention.

These capabilities align with GSMA Open Gateway-style APIs (application programming interfaces), enabling partners to detect suspicious activity without accessing private content or compromising user privacy.

By monetizing these signals, MNOs not only enhance customer safety but also create new revenue streams by offering fraud detection as a service to financial and digital commerce partners.

#ASEAN #Telcos #Face #Growing #Pressure #Combat #Mobile #Scams

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