opinion

Thwarting E-skimming: Tokenization, Data Fragmentation & Beyond

Thwarting E-skimming: Tokenization, Data Fragmentation & Beyond

As consumer spending evolves from offline, in-person transactions to an ever-growing number of digital purchases made online, the levels of fraud follow those spending patterns and preventing or mitigating e-skimming attempts by criminals, becomes an increasingly important part of the process.

OFFLINE CARD SKIMMING IS NOTHING NEW

The simplest answer to defending against e-skimming is tokenization.

In the past, we’ve spoken with clients many times about the notion that consumers have, on occasion, suffered from card skimmers that were able to steal their debit or credit card data by affixing an illegal third-party physical device to an ATM, self-serve gas station pumps or another DIY card-reading apparatus.

Many mistakenly believed that the shift toward digital transactions in the wake of a global pandemic would alleviate these sorts of problems. In fact, shoppers are using digital transactions much more often, as recent surveys have shown 25% percent of customers plan to use cash even less often than they had before the pandemic started.

E-SKIMMING IS BECOMING A SERIOUS PROBLEM

Fraudsters have adapted their scams to continue waging their illegal campaigns, with criminals now deploying e-skimming techniques by injecting malicious code into merchant websites and hijacking the transaction process to steal card data and other personal information during online order checkout. What makes these schemes even more insidious is that the merchant and the consumer often have no way of knowing the scam occurred.

That leaves open the real possibility that a third-party scammer may become able to defraud your customers and give the false impression that you were the cause of the malfeasance or were somehow complicit in their crimes, when they attempt to cash in on their stolen information weeks or months after a legal transaction took place on your site. Regardless of how many precautions you put in place, consumers view any scam that takes place as part of an interaction with your site, as sufficient reason to not return to your site.

For that reason, it is imperative that merchants safeguard their customers’ online transactions in ways that actually do prevent fraud. And the size of the risk is massive: just one recent e skimming attack that exploited a weakness in Adobe software caused widespread damage by compromising more than 2,000 popular e-commerce sites, affecting tens of thousands of consumers potentially.

TOKENIZATION HELPS SHIELD TRANSACTIONS

The simplest answer to defending against e-skimming is tokenization. This process allows shoppers using digital wallets to provide merchants with a single use identifier code that instantly verifies transactions. This method prevents fraudsters from obtaining or using any customer credentials, because none of that sensitive information is passed through at the point of sale during the transaction. When some hear of tokenization, they mistakenly think it is associated with the use of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. In reality, consumers can protect themselves just as well by using any third-party payment service at checkout.

DATA FRAGMENTATION REDUCES RISK

Data fragmentation is also a strong defense against e-skimming. By saving their debit or credit card information in a third-party payment account, consumers are able to make purchases digitally by using those accounts without providing any card numbers, card verification value (CVV) codes or other personal information at the point of sale.

Of course, as with anything else in digital security, there is no magic bullet. The key takeaway from all of this is that fragmenting the transaction, so that only the minimum amount of data necessary to complete the sale is passed at the point of sale, is an important part of reducing e-skimming and other methods of third-party fraud finding their way into your site transactions.

Consumer security experts have stated many times that the best way to prevent fraud of this kind is to educate consumers and merchants to help inoculate both legal parties to each transaction by making all aware that these scams exist, and to inform everyone of the benefits in utilizing tokenization methods at the point of sale.

ENABLE RAPID RESPONSE WHEN SITUATIONS ARISE

The ability to quickly detect fraud and to remedy it is essential as well. This is where experienced and properly credentialed payment processing experts can make the biggest difference for merchants, drawing upon years of experience and technological innovation. Payment processors seeking to secure their transactions must offer counter-fraud methods and deploy rapid response to instances of potential vulnerability, while remaining vigilant in ongoing efforts to ensure a fair, functional and frictionless path for consumers and merchants to reach mutual satisfaction on each transaction.

Jonathan Corona has 15 years of experience in the electronic payments industry. As MobiusPay’s EVP, Corona is primarily responsible for day-today operations as well as reviewing and advising merchants on a multitude of compliance standards set forth by the card associations. MobiusPay specializes in merchant accounts in the U.S., EU and Asia. Follow them @MobiusPay on Twitter, Facebook and IG.

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

profile

WIA Profile: Samantha Beatrice

Beatrice credits the sex positivity of Montreal for ultimately inspiring her to pursue work in adult entertainment. She had many friends working in the industry, from sex workers to production teams, so it felt like a natural fit and offered an opportunity to apply her marketing and social media savvy to support people she truly believes in and wants to see succeed.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Understanding the Latest Server Processors

Over the last decade, we mostly stopped talking about CPU performance. Recently, however, there has been a seismic and exciting change in the CPU landscape, due to innovation by a chip company called Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Brad Mitchell ·
opinion

User Choice, Privacy and the Importance of Education in AV

As we discussed last month, age verification in the adult sector is critical to ensuring legal compliance with ever-evolving regulations, safeguarding minors from inappropriate content and protecting the privacy of adults wishing to view adult content.

Gavin Worrall ·
opinion

Maintaining Payment Processing Compliance When the Goalpost Keeps Moving

VIRP is the new four-letter word everyone loves to hate. The Visa Integrity Risk Program went into effect last year, and affects several business types — including MCC 5967, which covers adult and anything else with nudity, and MCC 7273, dating services that don’t allow nudity.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

Making the Most of Your Sales Opportunities

The compliance road has been full of twists and turns this year. For many, it’s been a companywide effort just to make it across that finish line. Hopefully, most of us can now return our attention to some important things we’ve left on the back burner for months — like driving revenue.

Cathy Beardsley ·
profile

YourPaysitePartner Marks 25-Year Anniversary Amid Indie Content Renaissance

For 25 years, YourPaysitePartner has teamed up with stars and entrepreneurial brands to bring their one-stop-shop adult content dreams to life — and given the indie paysite renaissance of the past few years, the company’s efforts have paid off in spades.

Alejandro Freixes ·
opinion

WIA Profile: B. Wilde

B. Wilde considers herself a strategic, creative, analytical and entertaining person by nature — all useful traits for a “marketing girlie,” a label she happily embraces.

Women In Adult ·
opinion

Proportionality in Age Verification

Ever-evolving age verification (AV) regulations make it critical for companies in the adult sector to ensure legal compliance while protecting the privacy of adults wishing to view adult content. In the past, however, adult sites implementing AV solutions have seen up to a 60% drop in traffic as a result.

Gavin Worrall ·
opinion

Goodbye to Noncompete Agreements in the US?

A noncompetition agreement, also known as a noncompete clause or covenant not to compete, is a contract between an employer and an employee, or between two companies.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

The Search for Perfection in Your Payments Page

There has been a lot of talk about changes to cross sales and checkout pages. You have likely noticed that acquirers are now actively pushing back on allowing merchants to offer a negative option, upsell or any cross sales on payment pages.

Cathy Beardsley ·
Show More