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The pandemic has increased the appetite for e-commerce and contactless payments, and biometrics and artificial intelligence are playing a larger role in securing those transactions.

Shai Cohen, Senior Vice President of Global Fraud Solutions at TransUnion

March 10, 2021

4 Min Read
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COVID-19 has accelerated the need for companies to digitally transform. The more mature a company's digital transformation, the greater its advantage at reaching consumers and offering smooth transactions.

The pandemic has also changed the way consumers transact. According to research from Statista, monthly e-commerce traffic increased globally from 16 billion e-commerce website visitors in January 2020 to 22 billion in June 2020.

Also due to COVID-19, consumers are less willing to exchange money or even touch unsanitary credit and debit card machines. According to PYMNTS.com's September 2020 "Small and Medium Business Reopening" report, more than 50% of US consumers were using contactless payments (payment transactions that require no physical contact between the consumer's payment device and a physical terminal) by July 2020. Also, contactless card options (such as mobile wallet or app payments) had become the go-to method for 30% of shoppers by that point.

Despite reports of business failings during the pandemic, digital transactions have been a business saver for companies during this crisis. COVID-19 has dramatically accelerated digital transformation, with 61% of 1,610 global executives surveyed by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) for TransUnion noting that they have changed their digital transaction processes because of the pandemic.

But increased risk of fraud, identity theft, and cyber threats can accompany rapid digital transformation. Trust needs to be at the forefront of this wave for consumers using digital transactions, especially in a post-pandemic society. While 76% of consumers say that sharing data is a "necessary evil," 55% of businesses say their customers trust them more than they did two years ago, according to a PwC study. Technologies like biometrics and artificial intelligence (AI) will play an increasingly important role in creating trust, managing verification and authentication, and preventing fraud.

Biometrics to Dominate Payment Authentication
The EIU study found that that biometrics will become the dominant customer-authentication method for payments: "The survey shows optimism that evolving technological innovations like biometrics (fingerprint, facial, or voice recognition) could further reduce the trade-off between fraud, security, and [consumer experience], with 85% expecting biometrics to be used to authenticate the vast majority of payments in the next 10 years."

Biometrics eliminates one of the riskiest forms of authentication: the username/password combination. Although there are some risks involved with biometrics — identity thieves have figured out ways to steal a fingerprint — they continue to be safer than other forms of authentication. During digital transactions, they give customers peace of mind that their data is not at risk. In fact, a recent study by biometrics company Fingerprints found that 56% of consumers would prefer to use a biometric sensor on their payment card instead of a PIN, signaling market appetite for embedding biometric authentication solutions into the payment process.

AI and Machine Learning Boost Fraud-Detection Capability
Pattern recognition also plays a major role in fraud detection. Historical data shows patterns of how customers behave, what they are searching for, etc. But most companies don't have the resources to sift through historical data and follow pattern recognition to detect fraud in digital transactions.

That's the role of machine learning (ML), which is a form of AI. According to the TransUnion-sponsored EIU report, "AI has become an essential engine of digital transformation thanks to recent improvements in algorithmic performance, increased computer processing power, and a proliferation of real-world use cases, demonstrating its potential in diverse contexts and settings from insurance and banking to e-commerce."

Companies are using AI to detect behavior patterns, and this is where they are seeing the greatest benefits to decrease fraud and improve overall security in e-commerce transactions. In the EIU study, 43% of executives noted that improved fraud detection and security is the greatest benefit to using AI. This was the top selection by far, with smoother customer experience coming in second at 29%.

Optimism Despite Concerns
There are concerns surrounding AI. As the technology is still emerging and companies are just in the beginning stages of deploying and finding the right uses for it, they struggle to find engineers and IT specialists who are trained to manage AI systems. There are also questions about regulation of AI internationally and how it fits with privacy laws. While the technology will have positive impacts on the security of friction-free transactions, it is still only in its earliest stages of utilization.

The pandemic has challenged security efforts worldwide. The need to address security and "fraud-proof" digital transactions has never been greater. Although privacy and regulatory questions surround emerging technologies like AI, ML, and biometrics, most signs (and surveys) point to them helping improve authentication and trust in digital transactions.

About the Author(s)

Shai Cohen

Senior Vice President of Global Fraud Solutions at TransUnion

Shai Cohen leads TransUnion's Global Fraud Solutions Group. Cohen has spent decades in the IT and cybersecurity industries leading business units and software engineering and product management teams. He joined TransUnion from RSA, where he was the general manager of its Fraud and Risk Intelligence business. Previously, Cohen served in leadership roles at EMC and Intel.

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