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Home / Business and Economy / Banks Demand Social Media Fight Scams

Banks Demand Social Media Fight Scams

11 Dec

•

Summary

  • Westpac spent over A$500 million in five years on scam prevention.
  • Scammers use AI-generated images of famous people for fake investments.
  • Banks want social media firms like Meta to take more responsibility.
Banks Demand Social Media Fight Scams

Westpac Banking Corp is calling for enhanced action from social media companies, including Meta, to combat the escalating issue of online scams. Chief Executive Anthony Miller emphasized that financial institutions alone cannot effectively address this growing threat to consumers.

Miller revealed that Westpac has allocated more than A$500 million over the last five years to bolster scam and fraud prevention measures. These investments encompass advanced detection tools and customer protection systems, which have recently contributed to a 21% reduction in scam losses and prevented over A$360 million in customer losses.

Australian banks are increasingly advocating for greater accountability from digital platforms, highlighting that much of the fraudulent activity stems from social media and messaging applications. Efforts are underway, such as Meta's removal of thousands of deceptive 'celeb bait' scam ads, yet a more robust ecosystem-wide approach is deemed necessary to safeguard consumers from sophisticated scams often employing AI-generated content.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Westpac is urging Meta and other social media companies to take more significant action to curb online scams, stating banks cannot solve the problem alone.
Westpac has spent over A$500 million in the past five years on scam and fraud prevention measures.
These are scam ads using images of famous people, often AI-generated, to trick consumers into fake investment schemes.

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