National Economy
Monday, July 21, 2025
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Energy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Money Guide
    • Analysis
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy
No Result
View All Result
Read News
National Economy
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Energy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Money Guide
    • Analysis
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy
No Result
View All Result
National Economy
No Result
View All Result
Home Commentary Click Send

How The Underworld Works And What Fintech Can Learn

by Rarzack Olaegbe
2 years ago
in Click Send, Lead-In
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Fintech
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Telegram

 

We need each other. Building bridges, creating alliances, and pulling down walls will catapult us further. Such an effort will create a community. Distrust will vaporise. Trust will emerge. The ecosystem will thrive. This is how the underworld works. Trust is the currency the underworld spends. Not money. If a gang member betrays this trust, death is the penalty. But what do we do in an ecosystem where trust is alien? Where distrust reigns? Where an ecosystem has morphed into an echo system?

Meanwhile, ethical hackers allied. Fraudsters compared notes. Looters shared the loot. I did overhear two cultists exchanging ideas about a proposed strike. Why not? Coming together to fight the enemy should not be a debate. Or should we debate it? So, why do the Fintech firms watch each other like hawks? Why have they refused to share data? Why do they hide industry intelligence? Why do they refuse to close ranks? If Fintech firms build walls and do not trust each other, who will? Me? Or you?

On the one hand

You May Like

20 States Risk July Flooding Despite ₦620bn Ecological Funds

DisCos Billed Customers ₦257bn, Recovered ₦199bn In April — NERC

Ok, ok. I know data protection rules may not allow Fintech firms to unite and form anti-fraud groups. That is not the core of why Fintech will not come together. The real reason is that they simply do not trust each other. Why? I do not know. Maybe this story will help. A software person left a neo bank recently and joined a competing brand. She left with some business intelligence that would be valuable in her new abode. Her former employer was distraught.

She has not committed any crime. Changing jobs is a regular occurrence in that space. Does that imply the next staff would not have the data to perform her duty? Either yes or no, fraud happens. Willy-nilly. Fintech firms cannot be too vigilant.

Between 2020 and 2021, fraudulent activity recorded by deposit banks in Nigeria rose to 211,713 – a 44.8% jump. Data from the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Scheme (NDIC) has shown. Another KYC provider, Smile Identity, shared that fraud attempts increased by 50% between the second half of 2020 and the first half of 2022. The first half of 2022 alone recorded a 30% increase compared to the same period in 2021. In 9 months in 2020, cybercriminals had an astounding 91% success rate from over 46,000 attempts. Ah! Financial institutions and Fintech firms cannot be too vigilant.

On the other hand

TechCabal reported that Flutterwave and 12 other payment-processing firms are creating a data-sharing initiative to prevent fraud incidents by sharing data. Project Radar will “enable companies to pool details including banking and government identity data of individuals and groups that have attempted or made fraudulent transactions.”

So, will data sharing help Fintech firms curb fraud incidents? Esigie Aguele, the CEO of VerifyMe, another KYC software provider said yes. “When financial service providers (FSPs) share data, they are positioned to better identify patterns that suggest transaction fraud, leading to fewer false positives in the detection of financial crime,” said Jacqueline Jumah, a transformation specialist and a Director of Advocacy and Capacity Development at AfricaNenda, a digital payments-focused research and advocacy group.

However, they are reluctant to share data that would help them curb fraudulent activities. Why? Because they do not want to expose their fraud detection methods. If the Fintech firms do not trust each other; and do not share data to help the ecosystem curb fraud, who will? Me? Or you?

Deloitte and the World Economic Forum have explained how fraudulent data can be shared without compromising privacy or trade secrets. Jumah said the federated analysis could be used to create master fraud detection and prevention models across transactions without ever “sharing the underlying customer data across institutional lines.”

Secrecy within the fintech ecosystem will not help the industry. Instead, fraudsters will benefit from the secrecy. As long as Fintech firms entertain distrust by refusing to collaborate and fight fraud, how will you trust Fintech?

Tags: FINTECH
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

NITDA And Job Creation Drive

Next Post

Towards Enhanced Budgeting And Project Execution In NDDC

ANOTHER GOOD READ

20 States Risk July Flooding Despite ₦620bn Ecological Funds
Lead-In

20 States Risk July Flooding Despite ₦620bn Ecological Funds

7 days ago
DisCos Billed Customers ₦257bn, Recovered ₦199bn In April — NERC
Lead-In

DisCos Billed Customers ₦257bn, Recovered ₦199bn In April — NERC

7 days ago
Nigeria Secures $50m WTO Fund For Women Digital Exporters
Lead-In

Nigeria Secures $50m WTO Fund For Women Digital Exporters

7 days ago
IMF: Nigeria Must Expand Cash Transfers To Reduce Poverty
Lead-In

IMF: Nigeria Must Expand Cash Transfers To Reduce Poverty

7 days ago
Tougher Choices Ahead For Nigeria’s Economic Rebound In H2
Cover

Tougher Choices Ahead For Nigeria’s Economic Rebound In H2

7 days ago
Who Is The Cheat That Got Venture Capitalists’ Millions?
Click Send

Who Is The Cheat That Got Venture Capitalists’ Millions?

2 weeks ago
Next Post
Towards Enhanced Budgeting And Project Execution In NDDC

Towards Enhanced Budgeting And Project Execution In NDDC

Most Recent

Bello Pushes Digital Upskilling For Artisans, Technicians At Bauchi Forum

Bello Pushes Digital Upskilling For Artisans, Technicians At Bauchi Forum

July 19, 2025
Meta Deletes 10m Fake Profiles In Recent Crackdown

Meta Deletes 10m Fake Profiles In Recent Crackdown

July 17, 2025
Dangote Hails Tinubu Over NNPCL Leadership Choice

‘Africa Now Dumping Ground For Substandard Fuel’, Dangote Laments

July 17, 2025
NIS Launches Digital Platform For Expatriate Residence Permit Applications

NIS Launches Digital Platform For Expatriate Residence Permit Applications

July 17, 2025
Oyetola Vows To End Fish Importation

Oyetola Vows To End Fish Importation

July 17, 2025
Where Is The Fighting Ground Of Fintech Firms?

Where Is The Fighting Ground Of Fintech Firms?

July 14, 2025
FIFA Opens Office In Trump Tower

FIFA Opens Office In Trump Tower

July 14, 2025
Delta Gears Up For Groundbreaking CNS Swimming Championship

Delta Gears Up For Groundbreaking CNS Swimming Championship

July 14, 2025
Advertise with us

© 2024 | National Economy

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • International Business
  • Lead-In
    • Cover
    • Investigation
  • Economy
    • Nigerian Economy
    • Fiscal Policy
    • Energy
    • Agri Business
    • Transportation
    • Industry
    • Competition
    • Homes & Property
    • Insurance
    • Companies & Markets
      • Companies
      • Capital Market
  • Tech
  • States & Politics
  • Commentary
    • Analyst
    • Business Matters
    • All Angles Considered
    • ClickSend
  • Editorial
  • Data
  • Others
    • Opinion
    • Money Guide
    • Analysis
    • Growth
    • Sport Economy

© 2024 | National Economy