First-party fraud emerges as dominant global cybercrime threat

Date: 2025-05-14
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A new report from LexisNexis Risk Solutions reveals a dramatic shift in global fraud patterns, with first-party fraud surpassing scams to become the leading form of cybercrime attacks in 2024. The annual Cybercrime Report analyzed over 104 billion transactions across sectors, finding first-party fraud now accounts for 36% of all reported fraud cases - more than doubling from 15% the previous year. 

First-party fraud involves consumers deliberately providing false information for financial gain, including fraudulent loan applications, illegitimate chargeback claims, and fake reports of undelivered goods. The report suggests economic pressures including inflation and rising living costs have created conditions for this opportunistic fraud to flourish, particularly affecting Buy Now, Pay Later providers and financial institutions. 

While overall global attack rates showed relative stability in 2024 - with just a 1% increase in human-initiated attacks and 15% decrease in bot attacks concerning regional and sector trends emerged. The Asia-Pacific region experienced a 37% surge in attack rates, while Communications, Media and Mobile companies saw attacks rise 15%. Financial Services institutions faced an 18% increase in automated bot attacks. 

"Organizations face new challenges detecting first-party fraud as it requires different approaches than combating scams or account takeovers," said Stephen Topliss of LexisNexis Risk Solutions. He warned of an impending "AI-enabled wave" of sophisticated attacks, noting that while defenses have improved, cybercriminals are rapidly adopting advanced technologies. 

The report highlights password resets as a growing vulnerability, with 27% of desktop-initiated reset attempts identified as fraudulent. Account takeover attempts remain significant, representing 27% of global fraud cases, while scams declined to 11% of reported incidents. 

 

 

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