Card fraud pushes consumers to non-bank online payments

Published: 24 March 2009 y., Tuesday

 

A new Gartner Inc. report suggests that financial fraud could drive consumers away from banks and into the arms of electronic payment systems, such as PayPal, that they perceive to be more secure. The report, based on surveys of 5,000 adults, estimates about 7.5 percent of U.S. adults lost money to some form of financial fraud in 2008.

Gartner’s results add to a growing body of evidence that fraud costs banks customers, not just dollars. In 2008, victims of electronic-checking and/or savings-account transfer fraud were five times more likely to change banks because of security concerns. Fraud involving credit and debit/ATM cards was the method most actively used by crooks to steal money, claiming 36 percent more victims in 2008 than other types of fraud, according to Gartner.

Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

12 New Mobile Processors

CeBIT: AMD Jump-Starts Competition In Thin-And-Light Notebook Market; Unveils 12 New Mobile Processors more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft explores self-managing software

The company plans to unveil the initiative, called Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), at a Las Vegas conference next week when it debuts its new systems management tools more »

CeBit cleans up with new tech

Oracle deal: Good omen for Linux group? more »

DSL Leads Global Connections

Global DSL subscriptions nearly doubled during 2002, from 18.8 million to 35.9 million more »

Password-stealing e-mails spread

Scam widens; latest seeks Discover Card accounts more »

“Chief” level event

The ICT World Forum @ CeBIT 2003 more »

Deloder worm leaves behind two Trojan horses

The worm uses infected copies of remote-access app VNC and Internet-communications app IRC more »

Intel's New Wireless Platform: Centrino

After years of working with code-named chipsets and bundling the processors on a new platform, Intel Corp. Wednesday officially took the wraps of its latest Centrino technology more »

Two main problems

Europe finds MS guilty, but wonders what to do about it more »