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As phishing attacks get tougher,
PayPal is working on preventing this phenomenon by blocking older browsers or
browsers with no anti-phishing features from accessing their website. In a paper
called “A Practical Approach to Managing Phishing” and signed by Michael Barrett,
Chief Information Security Officer and Dan Levy, Senior Director of Risk
Management for Europe they said they have been working on solutions to stop
customers from losing money or be victimized by these attacks.
“We realized that our strategy
was based on preventing financial loss in the victim’s account,” said the two
authors in the paper. “We couldn’t eradicate the problem on our own – to make a
dent in phishing, it would take collaboration with the Internet industry, law
enforcement, and governments around the world."
Approximately 3.3% of the 124
million consumers became victims of phishing attacks last year, Gartner
estimates. Too many have fallen for e-mails asking for log-in credentials and
other personal information, which lead to all sorts of fraud, including
identity theft.
PayPal has developed the
following strategy to stop fraudsters: reclaim e-mail (prevent phishmail from
entering customers’ inboxes by collaborating with ISPs to block unsigned
e-mails), block phishing sites, authenticate users (prevent stolen
login/password from being used on PayPal.com), prosecute, and brand and
customer recovery (ensure that targeted customers will continue to use PayPal).
Some browsers, which are
considered to be unsafe or that don’t have the Extended Validation Certificates
should be blocked, the paper says: “letting users view the PayPal site on one
of these browsers (such as Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 3 or 4, Apple’s Safari
and Mozilla Firefox 1.x, although only IE3,4 have been named) is equal to a car manufacturer allowing drivers to buy
one of their vehicles without seatbelts.”
“There’s clearly no “silver
bullet” which will deal with phishing,” the paper concludes. “Rather, we’ve
made a credible case that a multi-layered strategy, such as the one we’ve laid
out, can in fact make a significant difference in dealing with the crime. We
encourage the rest of the industry to evaluate their anti-fraud efforts and
adopt a fraud prevention strategy along these lines. As the old adage goes,
“united we stand; divided we fall.”
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