ATLANTA -

On Wednesday, LexisNexis Risk Solutions highlighted three primary findings from its Cybercrime Report covering activities from July through December of last year.

The company indicated the findings crystalize how fraud has increasingly become borderless on a global scale. As the report analysis showed, LexisNexis Risk Solutions said cybercrime is a well-organized, global endeavor powered by networks of fraud.

While consumers enjoy access to goods and services from all over the world, LexisNexis Risk Solutions explained fraudsters are able to harness stolen identity data to launch corresponding cross-border fraud attacks.

This global, networked pattern of cybercrime is further reflected in mobile attack rate growth, which is heavily influenced by a global bot attack targeting mobile app registrations.

Fraudsters are migrating attacks to exploit the mobile channel: Of the 19 billion transactions recorded by the LexisNexis Digital Identity Network in this six-month period, for the first time, mobile attacks outpaced desktop attacks, with a 56% growth in the mobile attack rate year-over-year.

Experts elaborated about those key findings from the LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report, including:

Global networked fraud

LexisNexis Risk Solutions acknowledged the threat of networked cybercrime grows daily. Experts said fraudsters are working in hyperconnected, global networks, targeting businesses across country borders and industries.

In just one month, the report indicated 73,000 devices associated with a fraudulent event at one organization were later recorded at another organization within the Digital Identity Network.

Experts indicated all of the fraud networks identified in the recorded period involved organizations from more than one region and more than one industry. They explained this development confirms the global nature of networked fraud and illustrates how cybercriminals launder the proceeds of their crimes throughout the digital economy for maximum financial gain.

Globally connected bot attacks target new account creations

Over the period examined, LexisNexis Risk Solutions pointed out bot volumes saw strong growth from key regions, as fraudsters use automation to maximize success.

Experts conceded bot volumes can be very volatile given that one bot attack can represent millions of individual attacks. Analyzing regional growth can provide an alternative view of attack growth targeting specific industries and regions.

The Digital Identity Network recorded strong growth in bot attacks from Canada, Germany, France, India and Brazil. Furthering the notion of fraud without borders, LexisNexis Risk Solutions noted bots from Canada, France and Germany all targeted the same group of organizations, which were mainly in financial services and media.

Growing mobile attack rate

While attack rates targeting desktop transactions (2.7%) and mobile transactions (2.5%) are almost identical, LexisNexis Risk Solutions noted the mobile attack rate grew 56% while the desktop attack rate fell 23%, confirming the growing shift toward mobile fraud.

Within the mobile space, experts explained there are also nuanced differences between browser and app attacks.

Mobile browser transactions are attacked at a higher rate — 4.2% compared with 1.9% for apps — but the report mentioned mobile app transactions realized a greater growth in attack rate, up 171% compared with a steadier growth rate of 14% for browsers.

LexisNexis Risk Solutions emphasized that sharing information about known fraudsters across industries and geographies is more important than ever. The company explained that businesses can combat networked fraud by utilizing solutions like networks and consortia to share intelligence related to cybercrime.

“The ability to harness intelligence related to devices, location, identity and behavior to combat fraud is critical, given the globally connected fraud that permeates the global digital economy,” said Rebekah Moody, director of fraud and identity at LexisNexis Risk Solutions.

“Today, fraudsters are able to attack with unprecedented ease and speed and it is not enough for businesses to focus their fraud mitigation efforts on individual attacks,” Moody continued in a news release. “To mitigate the hyperconnected nature of global cybercrime, businesses need access to a shared view of risk that can operate across channels, across industries and across country borders.

“The layering of next-generation fraud defenses creates the opportunity to slow the onslaught of cybercrime,” Moody went on to say. “With tools like behavioral biometrics, consortium-based data sharing, bot data management and risk intelligence signals, LexisNexis Risk Solutions has developed the necessary innovations to help organizations stay ahead of fraudsters.

“Now more than ever, it is necessary for businesses to implement these advanced global solutions that can truly prevent the evolving nature of fraud,” she added.

To download a copy of the LexisNexis Risk Solutions Cybercrime Report, July through December 2019, go to this website.