iovation Issues Scam Alert for Summer Travel

Common Scam Techniques -- and 100 Percent Increase in the Use of Mobile Devices to Book Travel Since 2013 -- Allow Fraudsters to Take Advantage of "In the Moment" Purchases to Defraud Travelers


PORTLAND, OR--(Marketwired - Jun 3, 2015) - iovation, preventing fraud, identifying trustworthy customers and authenticating devices online and on mobile, today released a list of common online summer travel scams to watch out for. The company also announced that it has seen a hundred percent increase in online travel transactions made from mobile phones and tablets since 2013 with mobile now making up 24 percent of all web-based travel transactions.

"Mobile devices certainly make it more easy and spontaneous to book travel during the summer travel months, but with that convenience comes risk for both businesses and consumers," said iovation's Vice President of Product, Scott Olson. "We have evidence that fraudsters are taking note of this mobile surge and building their scams to take advantage of 'in the moment' purchases."

iovation analyzed more than a hundred million online travel transactions for fraudulent behavior and found some common ways criminals are looking to defraud consumers making increasingly spontaneous purchases:

  • Airline ticket credit fraud -- Crooks use stolen credit cards to purchase airline tickets online, then cancel them to receive a flight credit and confirmation number. The criminals then turn around and sell the flight credit confirmation number online at a steep discount. When the victim tries to redeem the credit, the transaction is denied because the initial tickets were bought with a stolen credit card.
  • Fake travel vouchers on social media -- A fraudulent promotion for free airline tickets periodically emerges -- often on Facebook -- and spreads fast and far across social media. The link is a ruse that leads users to a site that looks like an official promotion. It prompts users to connect with their Facebook account and install an application. When users accept, the malicious application can harvest personal information. While many trustworthy applications leverage Facebook and encourage users to connect their accounts to interact, take the time to be sure an application is official before installing or connecting.
  • Wiring a security deposit for property that doesn't exist -- Con artists will lift a legitimate ad for a vacation rental from Craigslist or another website. They will attract attention by adding a bargain-basement rental price, include a fake email address, and then ask prospective renters to wire money or send a prepaid debit card for a security deposit. Never wire money. Paying with PayPal or a credit card can offer some extra security.
  • Urgent cash request -- A new take has emerged on the old scam where people claim to have friends or family in common, are now stuck in a foreign country and urgently need money wired to them. Only this time, hackers get into your email account while you are vacationing and send a note--seemingly from you--to your contacts saying you need money wired as soon as possible. Because you are on vacation the scam often isn't quickly identified, and the criminal has time to collect money from a fraudulent account, then delete all your emails and contacts so it's hard to mitigate the crime.

"Fraudsters are always looking for new ways to carry out their schemes and it has become crystal clear that they are setting their sights on mobile users who some predict will account for a quarter of all online travel bookings this year," said identity theft expert Robert Siciliano. "Businesses, especially during the busy summer travel months, must make certain they are able to adapt to the newest fraud schemes while ensuring they aren't making their good customers go through extra hoops to transact with them."

iovation will be addressing the increase in mobile transactions and the types of fraud that often accompany mobile in a webinar entitled "The When, Why and How of Mobile Fraud Prevention" on Thursday, June 11 at 9am EDT. For more details, go to http://bit.ly/1IcJZ22

About iovation
iovation protects online businesses and their end users against fraud and abuse, and identifies trustworthy customers through a combination of advanced device identification, shared device reputation, device-based authentication and real-time risk evaluation. More than 3,000 fraud managers representing global retail, financial services, insurance, social network, gaming and other companies leverage iovation's database of more than 2.5 billion Internet devices and the relationships between them to determine the level of risk associated with online transactions. The company's device reputation database is the world's largest, used to protect 12 million transactions and stop an average of 200,000 fraudulent activities every day. The world's foremost fraud experts share intelligence, cybercrime tips and online fraud prevention techniques in iovation's Fraud Force Community, an exclusive virtual crime-fighting network. For more information, visit iovation.com.

Contact Information:

CONTACTS:
iovation Inc.
Connie Gougler
503-943-6748