The human factor is often discussed with regard to cybersecurity because most threats originate with humans and depend on humans to succeed. Human factors include user behavior, security awareness, security training, insider threats, and social engineering.
This track emphasizes the critical role of the human factor in reducing cyber threats. Expert speakers will explore how human-centric approaches can enhance an organization's overall security posture. Attendees will gain valuable insights into the human elements of cyber threats and how they can be analyzed and improved to strengthen defenses.
Fraud is a major cost to businesses worldwide. Banking, finance, payment services, and retail are some of the most frequent objectives of fraudsters, as expected. However, insurance, gaming, telecommunications, health care, cryptocurrency exchanges, government assistance agencies, travel and hospitality, and real estate are increasingly targeted as cybercriminals have realized that most online services trade in monetary equivalents.
Fraud Reduction Intelligence Platforms (FRIPs) are complex technical systems designed to receive user and transactional telemetry and evaluate it in conjunction with multiple, diverse forms of fraud intelligence to assess the likelihood of fraudulent behavior, make determinations and/or generate risk scores, and return verdicts and/or risk scores to calling client applications in real-time. FRIPs integrate with customer transaction processing and ecommerce systems and increasingly with their Customer Identity and Access Management (CIAM) solutions.
In this session we will look at critical capabilities for FRIPs and provide an overview on the solution market.