#stopfraud — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #stopfraud, aggregated by home.social.
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With the rise of deep‑fakes, spoofing, and realistic AI‑generated content, businesses should adopt a more robust, yet time‑tested, approach to verifying identity before initiating major account changes, processing user‑requested actions, or vetting new hires.
This approach isn’t complicated, but it does require a modest investment of time and money. It’s simply “doing business in person.” Whether it means requiring a customer to visit a bank for large financial transactions, having an employee or vendor confirm details through a verified third party, or communicating via a pre‑approved channel, the need for genuine, face‑to‑face interaction should become a core element of business policy and personal financial procedures to curb online fraud.
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With the rise of deep‑fakes, spoofing, and realistic AI‑generated content, businesses should adopt a more robust, yet time‑tested, approach to verifying identity before initiating major account changes, processing user‑requested actions, or vetting new hires.
This approach isn’t complicated, but it does require a modest investment of time and money. It’s simply “doing business in person.” Whether it means requiring a customer to visit a bank for large financial transactions, having an employee or vendor confirm details through a verified third party, or communicating via a pre‑approved channel, the need for genuine, face‑to‑face interaction should become a core element of business policy and personal financial procedures to curb online fraud.
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With the rise of deep‑fakes, spoofing, and realistic AI‑generated content, businesses should adopt a more robust, yet time‑tested, approach to verifying identity before initiating major account changes, processing user‑requested actions, or vetting new hires.
This approach isn’t complicated, but it does require a modest investment of time and money. It’s simply “doing business in person.” Whether it means requiring a customer to visit a bank for large financial transactions, having an employee or vendor confirm details through a verified third party, or communicating via a pre‑approved channel, the need for genuine, face‑to‑face interaction should become a core element of business policy and personal financial procedures to curb online fraud.
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With the rise of deep‑fakes, spoofing, and realistic AI‑generated content, businesses should adopt a more robust, yet time‑tested, approach to verifying identity before initiating major account changes, processing user‑requested actions, or vetting new hires.
This approach isn’t complicated, but it does require a modest investment of time and money. It’s simply “doing business in person.” Whether it means requiring a customer to visit a bank for large financial transactions, having an employee or vendor confirm details through a verified third party, or communicating via a pre‑approved channel, the need for genuine, face‑to‑face interaction should become a core element of business policy and personal financial procedures to curb online fraud.
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With the rise of deep‑fakes, spoofing, and realistic AI‑generated content, businesses should adopt a more robust, yet time‑tested, approach to verifying identity before initiating major account changes, processing user‑requested actions, or vetting new hires.
This approach isn’t complicated, but it does require a modest investment of time and money. It’s simply “doing business in person.” Whether it means requiring a customer to visit a bank for large financial transactions, having an employee or vendor confirm details through a verified third party, or communicating via a pre‑approved channel, the need for genuine, face‑to‑face interaction should become a core element of business policy and personal financial procedures to curb online fraud.