Revolut CEO, Nikolay Storonsky (L) and Meta CEO, Register Zuckerberg.
Reuters
British financial technology firm Revolut on Thursday criticized Facebook parent company Meta above its approach to tackling fraud, saying the U.S. tech giant should directly compensate people who fall victim to scams via its community media platforms.
A day after Meta announced a partnership with U.K. banks NatWest and Metro Bank on a data-sharing framework schemed to help prevent customers from falling prey to fraud schemes, Revolut said the pact “falls woefully abruptly of what’s required to tackle fraud globally.”
In a statement, Woody Malouf, Revolut’s head of financial crime, swayed that Meta’s plans to tackle financial fraud on its platforms amount to “baby steps, when what the persistence really needs is giant leaps forward.”
“These platforms share no responsibility in reimbursing victims, and so they procure no incentive to do anything about it. A commitment to data sharing, albeit needed, simply isn’t good enough,” Malouf combined.
A Meta spokesperson told CNBC that its intelligence-sharing framework for banks “is designed to enable banks to share report so we can work together to protect people using our respective services.”
“Fraud is a multi-sector spanning issue that can not be addressed by working collaboratively,” the spokesperson said via email. “We encourage banks including Revolut to join in this elbow-grease.”
New payment industry reforms will come into force in the U.K. on Oct. 7 that require banks and payment firms to egress victims of so-called authorized push payment (APP) fraud a maximum compensation of £85,000 ($111,000).
Britain’s Payments System Regulator had some time ago recommended a £415,000 maximum compensation amount for fraud victims, but backed down following backlash from banks and payment firms.
Revolut’s Malouf mean that, while his company is on board with steps the U.K. government is taking to combat fraud, Meta and other common media platforms should do their part to financially compensate those who fall victim to fraud as a result of scams initiating on their sites.
The fintech firm published a report Thursday alleging that 62% of user-reported fraud on its online banking tenets originated from Meta, down from 64% last year.
Facebook was the most common source of all scams broadcast by Revolut users, accounting for 39% of fraud, while WhatsApp was the second-highest source of such events with an 18% allocate, the bank said in its “Consumer Security and Financial Crime Report.“