All-in-one verification platform, Sumsub, highlights seven key fraud trends of 2022 and shares predictions for 2023 in its annual identity fraud study
Sumsub, a global verification platform providing customizable KYC, KYB, transaction monitoring, and AML solutions for the whole customer journey, published its second annual Identity Fraud Report, that identifies fraud trends and statistics based on millions of identity checks across 21 industries and over 500,000 fraud cases between 2021-2022.
Seven key findings from Sumsub’s Identity Fraud Report:
- 55.8% of all identity fraud occurs in 5 countries – with 5.1% in the USA alone
- E-sports has the highest fraud incidence with a 2.9% share of total cases
- Crypto and banking both experienced a nearly two-fold increase in identity fraud in 2022
- Payment fraud increased by 40% in 2022
- ID cards are the most commonly forged document type in 2022
- 79% of all forged documents used male personas in 2022
- Deepfakes are getting more advanced and growing in popularity
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Countries and documents most vulnerable to fraud in 2022
In 2022, over half of all fraud cases happened in five countries: Bangladesh (22%), Pakistan (15.2%), Vietnam (8.1%), Nigeria (5.4%) and the USA (5.1%).
In 2022, ID cards have accounted for 8 out of the top 10 document types used for fraud. In 2021, Nigerian driving licenses were the most vulnerable to forgery (7.6% of them were forged), followed by Bangladesh and Pakistan ID cards. This year, the only driving license to make it to the top 10 is from the US.
Fraud trends in various industries
In 2021, the landscape was different, with payment and consulting targeted the most. In 2022, things changed: the payment industry no longer leads the chart, and consulting has dropped in popularity. Instead, fraudsters have begun targeting E-sports–a form of virtual multiplayer competition using video games–more frequently (2.9% of all fraud cases) due to the explosive growth of the industry over the past two years and relatively low onboarding barriers.
The Sumsub report also highlights an approximately twofold increase in fraud targeting the crypto industry—from 0.7% of all fraud cases to 1.5%. Likewise, banking has seen nearly 100% growth in fraud cases, while e-commerce has seen a thirteen-fold increase in the proportion of fraud (from 0.1% of all cases in 2021 to 1.3% in 2022).
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Transaction fraud in 2022
Fraudsters are particularly keen on using stolen bank cards, chiefly targeting financial services, e-commerce industries. 3.6% of all e-commerce revenue in 2022 has been stolen by fraudsters. Payment fraud grew 40% from 2021 to 2022, significantly increasing the share of this type of fraud worldwide. So it’s no wonder that 46% of payment merchants now prioritize the prevention of illegal chargebacks.
“As transaction fraud increases and evolves rapidly, the need to safeguard your business is higher than before, and the easiest way to do this is by implementing an advanced transaction monitoring and risk-management solution that cross-checks user KYC data and transaction information to prevent fraud – just like Sumsub’s KYT solution does,” – comments Vyacheslav Zholudev, Sumsub’s co-founder and CTO.
The most popular fraud schemes and behavioral trends
In 2022, the main fraud vectors are account takeovers (gaining illegitimate access to another person’s account), multi-accounting (registering more accounts than permitted), chargeback fraud (raising fake disputes with the bank) and biometric spoofing (using life-like masks, deepfakes, and other advanced methods).
Sumsub found that websites are getting attacked more often in 2022, while mobile apps attack vectors are not as popular. Still, the number of cases continues to grow both for mobile and web applications. As for the operating systems fraudsters target, this year Android extended its lead, seeing 0.4% more fraud than iOS, as opposed to a 0.1% difference in 2021.
Gender statistics on identity fraud suggest that male documents make up the majority of forgeries. This gap has widened even more in 2022, reaching 79% compared to 72% in 2021.
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Tampered images out of fashion, advanced deepfakes on the rise
According to Sumsub’s analytics, fraudsters have developed more advanced deepfake technology that is exceptionally difficult to distinguish from reality. Fraudsters no longer rely on blatant attacks like printed images, phone screens, etc. Now, just about every attempt at bypassing verification is made with the help of carefully crafted deepfakes and fabricated IDs that require robust anti-fraud technology to detect.
Since fraud technology is advancing rapidly, pattern recognition is becoming a must-have in order to catch fraudsters early. This includes behavioral analysis which can indicate if a person spends too much time (or too little) on a check.
Predictions for 2023
Sumsub’s AI/ML experts see deepfakes as a growing threat that will continue in 2023. As image generation and AI technologies become more available, fraudsters will get more advanced. At the same time, businesses will have more tools at their disposal to prevent fraud.
“In 2023, we expect developing countries to lead the fraud charts due to the vulnerability of local documents. It is also likely that the crypto, trading, and e-commerce industries will take the biggest hit from criminals using advanced fraud tools. Staying up to date with the recent antifraud developments will be crucial for companies operating online. Sumsub will be looking carefully into the changing identity fraud landscape, and we update our product solutions accordingly to ensure 100% fraud protection for our global clients”, – says Vyacheslav Zholudev, Co-founder and CTO at Sumsub.
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