CEO calls for tougher laws
By Dan Ilett
Published: 7 October 2005 13:10 GMT
Credit card giant Visa is to spend $200m on what it calls 'anti-fraud measures', as criminal activity online continues to rise.
John Coghlan, Visa CEO, has also called for tougher laws to combat credit card crime and protect customers.
At a financial services conference in the US earlier this week, he said: "Together, we actually have the intent, the capabilities and the resources to harden our environment even further and secure the trust of consumers and businesses."
Coghlan said he wanted tougher penalties for those who commit fraud and better data protection laws for US consumers. He added that a standard for disclosing data breaches to consumers was also required.
Data from the Anti-Phishing Working Group shows the total number of attacks around the world peaked in May at almost 15,000, and fell to 14,135 in July. However, the use of spyware has risen - in April, 77 attacks contained password stealing programs, a figure which rose to 174 in July.
Earlier this year, 40 million card accounts were reported exposed to potential fraud as the result of a data breach. Twenty-two million of those were Visa cards.
CompanyMcAfee creates best-of-breed computer security solutions that span large enterprises, governments, small- & medium-sized businesses, & ...
Ensuring the security of customer credit card information and business critical data in line with PCI DSS 1.2 and as defined in the Figleaves IT ...
We will require a current copy of a passport, driving license, ID card or NI card will be required as part of the registration process. The ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Nick Beecham and Belinda Doshi
No more tax breaks for offshoring?
Financial services firms must prepare now for 2010 legal changes
Tim Ferguson
On a new Voyager, tackling fraud and the intellectual challenge
Interview: Nationwide IT director, Peter Stafford
Nick Heath
David Lister on smart grids and why he left RBS
Interview: National Grid CIO
Andy Jones
Why banks will push ahead with offshoring
Comment: Even if they don't want to
Catherine Stagg-Macey
Legacy IT holding back insurers
Comment: Economic crisis means finance giants must step lively
Julian Goldsmith
The City fund manager with no IT department
Q&A: How asset management is embracing the cloud...