Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Wednesday, September 16 2020 - 13:00
AsiaNet
The LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report Reveals New Opportunities and Risks for APAC in Online Channels During Global Pandemic
ATLANTA, Sept. 16, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

-- Findings from the first half of 2020 highlight bot volume growth in the 
region coupled with a decline in human-initiated attack rates

LexisNexis(R) Risk Solutions today released its biannual Cybercrime Report, 
which tracks global cybercrime activity from January 2020 through June 2020. 
The report analyzes how the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the global digital 
economy, regional economies, industries, businesses and consumer behavior. The 
period has seen strong transaction volume growth compared to 2019 but an 
overall decline in global attack volume. This is likely linked to growth in 
genuine customer activity due to changing consumer habits.

Logo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/494562/LexisNexis_Risk_Solutions_Logo.jpg   

The LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report analyzes data from more than 
22.5 billion transactions processed by the LexisNexis(R) Digital Identity 
Network(R), a 37% growth year over year. Mobile device transactions also 
continue to rise, with 66% of all transactions coming from mobile devices in 
the first half of 2020, up from 20% in early 2015. The Digital Identity 
Network(R) also notes an uptick in transactions from new devices and new 
digital identities. We attribute this to many new-to-digital consumers moving 
online to procure goods and services that were no longer available in person or 
harder to access via a physical store, during the pandemic.

The Asia-Pacific (APAC) region saw higher attack rates than the global average, 
3% compared to 1.4% globally. Attack rates also grew during both April and May 
and experienced a large spike in June through an identity spoofing bot attack 
from the Philippines, which targeted a payment gateway. However, attack rates 
in APAC declined across all channels year over year. The only exception was a 
9% growth in automated bot attacks in the region, although this growth is still 
lower than the global average of 13%.

APAC continues to experience higher attack rates than North America or EMEA. 
The Digital Identity Network found significant bot activity coming from Japan, 
India and Australia. They now rank fifth, seventh and eighth respectively as 
some of the largest originators of automated bot attacks by volume globally. 
Japan appears to be a particular hotspot: The country recorded the largest 
growth in bot attack originations year over year and is now one of the top ten 
largest contributors to human-initiated cyberattacks by volume.

Hyper-connected, networked fraud continues to be a key feature of attacks. One 
example of an Australian fraud network saw groups of fraudsters targeting the 
financial services, e-commerce and media sectors. This single network consisted 
of 2,400 devices, 3,700 email addresses and 1,500 telephone numbers, and at 
least $800,000 USD was exposed to fraud across the entire network.

Additional Key Findings from the LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report:

    -- Decline in Attack Rate - The overall human-initiated attack rate 
       across the Digital Identity Network fell through the first half of 
       2020, showing a 33% decline year over year. The breakdown by sector 
       shows a 23% decline in financial services and a 55% decline in e-
       commerce attack rates.

       Latin America experienced the highest attack rates of all regions 
       globally and realized consistent growth in attack rates from March to 
       June 2020. The attack patterns in U.S., Canada and EMEA had less 
       volatility and fewer spikes in attack rates during the six-month 
       period obs. 

    -- Attack Vector Global View - Media is the only industry that recorded 
       an overall year over year growth in human-initiated cyberattacks. The 
       Digital Identity Network recorded the 3% increase solely across mobile 
       browser transactions. 

       Globally, automated bots remain a key attack vector in the Digital 
       Identity Network. Financial services organizations experienced a surge 
       in automated bot attacks and continue to experience more bot attacks 
       than any other industry. 

    -- Across the Customer Journey - New account creations see attacks at a 
       higher rate than any other transaction type in the online customer 
       journey. However, the largest volume of attacks targets online 
       payments. Login transactions have seen the biggest drop in attack rate 
       in comparison to other use cases. 

       Analysis across new customer touchpoints in the online journey is 
       included in this report for the first time, providing additional 
       context on key points of risk such as money transfers and password 
       resets.

    -- During COVID-19 - All industries have felt the impact of COVID-19. 
       There are clear peaks and troughs in transaction volumes coinciding 
       with global lockdown periods. Financial services organizations 
       realized a growth in new-to-digital banking users, a changing 
       geographical footprint from previously well-traveled consumers and a
       reduction in the number of devices used per customer. There have also 
       been several attacks targeting banks offering COVID-19-related loans.

       E-commerce merchants have seen an increase in digital payments and 
       several other key attack typologies that coincide with the lockdown 
       period. These included account takeover attacks using identity 
       spoofing and more first-party chargeback fraud.

"This is the first LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report to include data 
on the new reality of conducting business during a pandemic," said Rebekah 
Moody, director of fraud and identity at LexisNexis Risk Solutions. "The move 
to digital, for both businesses and consumers, has been significant. Yet with 
this change comes opportunity for exploitation. Fraudsters look for easy 
targets: whether government support packages, new lines of credit or media 
companies with fewer barriers to entry. We need to ensure that all consumers, 
especially those who might be new to digital, are protected. Businesses must 
arm themselves with a layered defense that can detect the full spectrum of 
possible attacks and is future-proofed against evolving threats." 

"Fraudsters remain masters of disguise. They operate alone and in highly 
connected groups to build up huge networks of cross-industry and regional 
fraud. This is a particularly acute issue in the APAC region, where we see the 
highest global attack rates," added Cameron Church, director of fraud and 
identity at LexisNexis Risk Solutions. "We must identify and block fraudsters – 
whether opportunists or highly networked fraud rings – the moment they 
transact. Knowledge sharing must be as pivotal to global businesses as it is to 
the cybercriminals that attack them."

Download a copy of the LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report, January 
through June 2020 ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2916253-1&h=2231675187&u=https%3A%2F%2Frisk.lexisnexis.com%2Fglobal%2Fen%2Finsights-resources%2Fresearch%2Fcybercrime-report&a=LexisNexis+Risk+Solutions+Cybercrime+Report%2C+January+through+June+2020 
) (English only.) Join Rebekah Moody, director of fraud and identity at 
LexisNexis Risk Solutions, for an overview of the latest Cybercrime Report ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2916253-1&h=2693614664&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwebinars.on24.com%2FLNRS%2FCybercrimeAPAC&a=an+overview+of+the+latest+Cybercrime+Report 
) on Wednesday, September 16 at 2:00pm HKT (English only). 

About LexisNexis Risk Solutions
LexisNexis(R) Risk Solutions harnesses the power of data and advanced analytics 
to provide insights that help businesses and governmental entities reduce risk 
and improve decisions to benefit people around the globe. We provide data and 
technology solutions for a wide range of industries including insurance, 
financial services, healthcare and government. Headquartered in metro Atlanta, 
Georgia, we have offices throughout the world and are part of RELX (LSE: 
REL/NYSE: RELX), a global provider of information-based analytics and decision 
tools for professional and business customers across industries. For more 
information, please visit www.risk.lexisnexis.com and www.relx.com.

Media Contact:
Marcy Theobald
+1.678.694.6681
Marcy.Theobald@lexisnexisrisk.com 

SOURCE  LexisNexis Risk Solutions