New technologies are changing the way we transact. Banks are increasingly focusing on mobile applications and launching products such as funds transfers via Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and mobile wallets.
Being easy and convenient, there has been a 55 times rise in the value usage of mobile banking and 5.5 times rise in the volume of transactions between financial years 2012 and 2015, according to a report from Assocham and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
The sudden spurt in extensive use of technology, however, is making customers increasingly vulnerable to risks such as phishing, identity theft, card skimming, and vishing (making consumers disclose sensitive information over telephone calls).
Around 65 per cent of all fraud cases reported by banks were technology-related, says the report.
If a customer falls prey to a fraud, the onus is on him to prove it wasn't his mistake. Banks do not take responsibility. Though RBI believes the primary responsibility of preventing fraud lies with banks; it has done little to shift the onus of investigation from customers to banks. It's the victim who has to do the running around, following up with police and banks. In the current set-up, the only recourse for the customer is going to court to prove his or her innocence and get compensated.
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