In Maharashtra, people lost Rs 4.8 crore to bank fraud, while in Delhi people lost Rs 2.9 crore.
Business
Standard : Maharashtra reported 233 cases of ATM fraud in
2018-19, the highest in the entire country, Reserve Bank Of India
(RBI) data, accessed by TOI, revealed. The data showed that Delhi
grabbed the second spot with 179 cases, followed by Tamil Nadu with
147 cases of ATM fraud.
In
Maharashtra, people lost Rs 4.8 crore to bank
fraud, while in Delhi people lost Rs 2.9 crore. The country
witnessed an increase in ATM fraud cases in general (up from 911 to
980). Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and Tripura were the only three states
that didn’t report a single incident. However, the money lost came
down from Rs 65.3 crore in 2017-18 to Rs 21.4 crore in 2018-19.
Police
and cybercrime experts were quoted by the daily as saying that this
was just the tip of the iceberg as amounts of less than Rs 1 lakh
were not considered for the data.
They
said crooks were now employing various means to get control of
people’s bank accounts through ATM or debit cards. The most
commonly used trick is installing skimmer devices on ATMs and
point-of-sale machines, which are then used to fraudulently copy data
from cards. This data is then put on blank cards and illegal
transactions are carried out.
Last
year, customers were asked to replace their existing debit/credit
cards with new ones as the RBI had mandated banks to replace all
existing magnetic stripe-only cards with EMV chip cards.
Chip-based
cards use higher standards of data encryption and storage technology
compared to magnetic stripe cards. Sensitive customer data is stored
on a chip in these, making it difficult for fraudsters to access
customer information. The information in the chip is encrypted and so
is the transmission of information thereon.
The
shift to chip-based cards was driven globally due to increased risks
of card cloning (cloning stems from magnetic stripe cards that have
static information which is easily captured if the card is used at an
ATM where a cloning device is installed).
Despite
these measures, the number of incidents of ATM
fraud has increased from 911 in 2017-18 to 980 in 2018-19.
However, the amount involved has decreased drastically from Rs 63.3
crore to 21.4 crore.
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