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Global: FinCEN, FDIC to Hold ‘Tech Sprint’ for Digital Identity Tools

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FinCEN FDIC to Hold Tech Sprint for Digital Identity Tools scaled
Signage hangs outside the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, Jan. 2, 2020. The federal appeals court in Manhattan today said the government may pursue insider-trading charges under a newer securities-fraud law not subject to a key requirement of the statute prosecutors traditionally use. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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The proliferation of scams, information leaks and synthetic identity fraud is presenting a major challenge to the online financial services industry, federal regulators said.

Two federal regulators – the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) – have teamed up to host an upcoming “tech sprint” aimed at testing the effectiveness of digital identity proofing.

According to a joint announcement published Wednesday, digital identity proofing refers to the process of collecting, validating and verifying information about a person. This information is often used by financial institutions to establish proof of identity when customers are attempting to access services online.

As the financial services industry moves increasingly online, fraudsters and scammers have found new and inventive ways to commit financial crime. According to the FDIC and FinCEN, leaks and hacks of personally identifiable information (PII) and the rise in “synthetic identities” (a type of fraud in which someone creates a new identity from a mix of real and fake information) have made establishing a person’s true identity increasingly challenging.

In the upcoming tech sprint, which doesn’t yet have a specific start date, participants will be asked to come up with a “scalable, cost-efficient, risk-based solution to measure the effectiveness of digital identity proofing to ensure that individuals who remotely (i.e., not in person) present themselves for financial activities are who they claim to be.”

FDIC and FinCEN’s goal is to increase the security of online financial services, reduce fraud and identity theft, cut down on money laundering and terrorist financing and improve customer confidence in the online financial services industry – something that has been challenged by the ongoing proliferation of scams.

Registration for the tech sprint – open to nonprofit organizations, private companies and academics – will begin in “coming weeks,” followed by a two-week application period.

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