Leveraging voice technology to combat cyber-fraud
- December 31, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Leveraging voice technology to combat cyber-fraud
Subject :Science and Technology
Cyber-fraud:
- It is a situation in which someone uses the internet to get money, goods, etc. from people illegally by tricking them: Not only does cyber fraud inflict losses on the cardholders, but also the merchants, merchants’ banks, and card issuers.
Cyber frauds in India:
- According to data by the Reserve Bank of India, frauds have cost the country an estimated ₹100 crore a day over the last seven years.
- The frauds reported in 2021-22 were 23.69% higher than in the previous year (9,103 cases reported compared to 7,359 in 2020-21), although there was a decline in the amount involved.
- The main reasons for the rise in fraud include greater use of digital payments, telephone banking, and online banking services.
- Growing fraud also means rising losses for financial institutions and increasing cases for law enforcement to solve.
An emerging technology to tackle cyber fraud:
- This technology is known as Adopting Voice Technology (VT).
- It encompasses voice biometrics or voice/speech recognition technology.
- it uses the unique characteristics of a person’s voice as identification.
- The technology creates a digital voiceprint and compares it to a caller’s voice.
- Voice authentication can significantly improve security over knowledge-based authentication methods, which fraudsters have exploited to scam people.
Benefits of this technology:
- Compared to other biometrics, voice use is the cheapest technology, and does not require a reader or special device.
- It is also non-invasive, portable and affords remote identification.
- Although banks have traditionally relied on the use of passwords, passwords are the weakest link in security (81% of hacking-related breaches involve weak passwords).
- Unlike a password, a customer’s voice is impossible to spoof or copy, and is far more challenging to hack.
- VT verifies a caller swiftly in seconds by analysing the caller’s voice and flags suspicious calls. VT allows privacy because it does not require users to reveal personal information.
- Voice biometrics can help financial institutions to ensure higher levels of protection for customers and employees.
Prospects of the voice biometrics industry:
- In February 2019, HSBC became the first bank to take the revolutionary leap in introducing voice recognition for mobile banking customers — telephone banking fraud cases fell by over 50%.
- The voice biometrics industry is growing exponentially now.
- Experts expect the market to reach a market size of $3.9 billion by 2026, with a compound annual growth rate of 22.8%.
Growing applications:
- An essential tool for forensics and law enforcement.
- Airport security as voice biometric has a lower error rate than face recognition technology.
- It also has the ability to resist playback attacks.
- It is sensitive enough to detect if someone is impersonating the user or playing a recording.
- It can identify even if the user has a cold or a sore throat.
- Disbursal of money for various schemes
- Verify the proof of life of pensioners from their homes.
VT has the advantage:
- improving user experience
- reducing call handle time
- call center costs
Disadvantages:
- May not be 100% foolproof, may give false positives, and has an accuracy between 90% and 99%.
- But some recent systems which come with voice analytics of gender and age identification, claim 100% verification accuracy.