Cybercrime report finds young adults and adults over 75 most vulnerable to fraud attacks
LexisNexis Risk Solutions released its biannual Cybercrime Report covering July 2020 through December 2020, which details how the evolving threat landscape created new opportunities for cybercriminals around the world, particularly as they targeted new online users. Analysis shows that the under 25 age group is most vulnerable to fraud attacks while the oldest age group is second most vulnerable and loses the most money. The stark risk at both ends of the age spectrum emphasizes the importance for companies to protect both new-to-digital and vulnerable customers when transacting online in 2021. The report also provides a full year review which highlights how 2020 saw an overall decline in human-initiated attacks, while bot attacks accelerated.
The Cybercrime Report analyzes transaction data from the LexisNexis Digital Identity Network, a repository of global shared intelligence gained from billions of consumer interactions including logins, payments and new account applications. The Digital Identity Network processed 47.1 billion transactions in 2020, an increase of almost 12 billion year-over-year. The fraud attack rate observed in the Digital Identity Network decreased on average across all digital businesses year-over-year, although media companies saw an increase in the overall attack rate at account opening.