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New, risk-based technologies powered by AI and machine learning (ML) enable financial institutions to analyze transaction, device, geographical and behavioral data to make real-time security decisions, detecting and preventing fraud as it happens, says OneSpan's Michael Crichton.
December 30OneSpan -
The morphing of e-commerce and brick and mortar technology will require strategies that address both at the same time, says Zoomd's Omri Argaman.
December 26Zoomd -
Innovation is showing little sign of slowing, creating both myriad benefits and risks moving ahead, says Visa's Paul Fabara.
December 26Visa -
Consumers face significant risk if this highly personal information is exposed, says Mitek's Stephen Ritter.
December 24Mitek -
It can be a painful process for a bank to go digital, but there are ways to ease the transition.
December 24Scotiabank -
The first line of defense is to not pay the ransom. Then a layered approach to security and recovery plan can ward off the crooks, says Nominet's Stuart Reed.
December 24Nominet -
To compete and remain relevant in 2020 and beyond, organizations must rapidly develop, test and deploy innovative new products and services in increasingly larger amounts, says Paragon Application Systems' Steve Gilde.
December 23Paragon -
Open banking transactions are not initiated by a consumer but are coming from another financial services company. This could make some fraud detection models in place today obsolete.
December 20Appdome -
Given the financial health and outlook for many retailers, their ability to get the digital experience right could be the difference between operating in 2021, or joining the growing list of retail bankruptcies, says Applause's Kristin Simonini.
December 20Applause -
For most companies, no role within accounts payable focuses solely on handling errors, enablement, fielding phone calls, or escheatment, says Nvoicepay's Kristin Cardinali.
December 19Nvoicepay