More data isn’t always better
By André Ferraz, CEO and Co-Founder at Incognia
In fraud prevention, the problem is usually not a lack of data.
We have so many signals available to us, they’re coming out of our ears.
But there are two common data problems I see in fraud prevention:
- You can’t rely on the data you have because it’s not tamper-resistant
- You have lots of data, but it’s low quality data
Let’s start with the first one.
If you can’t rely on the data you have, you might not even know the scale of your fraud problems.
Your platform could be barreling towards an iceberg of different fraud types, but you would only see what’s poking above the surface:
The tampered data that gets reported back to you.
Take device fingerprinting as an example.
If your device fingerprinting solution isn’t tamper-proof, fraudsters can use methods like emulators or app tampering to escape detection.
You might think that your device fingerprint provider is keeping your platform safe from multi-accounting. But without the right tampering detection, fraudsters could be making thousands of accounts right under your nose without you noticing.
If their solution doesn’t have strong tamper detection, the data you’re getting back from it isn’t trustworthy.
Then you’ve got the second problem.
Too much low-quality data.
Some fraud vendors pitch you on the huge amount of data they can provide you.
But at the end of the day, that dump truck of data might not be that useful.